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  • Have you ever come home from a long day to find your front door swarmed by flying insects?

  • Or more accurately, your front door’s light?

  • Turns out, that’s more than a minor inconvenience.

  • Light pollution is contributing to worldwide insect decline

  • and that’s actually a huge problem.

  • Insects may seem pesky.

  • They bite and sting us, flutter and scuttle into our houses,

  • swarm around our faces and eat our crops.

  • But actually, of all the insects in the world, only 1% of them are pests responsible for any real damage!

  • And almost all insects play really important roles in our world.

  • For instance, many are pollinators, so they keep ecosystems running by perpetuating plant populations.

  • They play a role in energy cycling as they aid in decomposition and disposal of waste.

  • And theyre also food for many other organisms,

  • like small rodents, amphibians, birds and bats

  • all of which have important jobs to do in the world’s food and energy webs.

  • I say all of this to give perspective to this next fact:

  • a recent study, the most comprehensive of its kind,

  • estimates that 40% of the world’s insect species may become extinct within the next few decades.

  • The groups of insects that are most at risk are Lepidoptera, which includes moths and butterflies,

  • Hymenoptera, which includes bees and ants,

  • andas a separate categorydung beetles.

  • But the problem, like most, is complex.

  • A changing climate messes with things like insect reproduction and migration,

  • both of which are highly sensitive to changing patterns in seasonal temperatures and precipitation.

  • Habitat loss and fragmentation actually pose one of the biggest threats to insect populations,

  • as wild land across the globe is rapidly converted for human activities like intensive agriculture.

  • The use of chemical pesticides and other kinds of pollutants

  • is certainly another big contributor to the very real threat facing not only bugs, but us as well.

  • Cause I don’t think I can emphasize enough just how important bugs are to our world.

  • We need these insects, especially Hymenoptera to make our food possible.

  • You may have seen that photo showing what a grocery store would look like without bees?

  • The shelves are almost entirely empty.

  • Now, picture that kind of diversity loss radiating across entire ecosystems,

  • not just the grocery stores where we shop for food.

  • Losing 40% of the world’s insects would make up the majority of the species loss in the sixth extinction.

  • That’s the major extinction event were experiencing right now in the present Anthropocene epoch.

  • This event is largely human-driven and will take radical efforts on the part of humans to make it stop.

  • So what can we do?

  • One seemingly simple thing?

  • Turn our lights off.

  • Some bugs move toward light, or are what's called positively phototactic,

  • and we have a couple of ideas about why that is.

  • It could be that light messes with their internal navigation systems.

  • With the flood of artificial light they can’t navigate by natural sources of light like the moon,

  • so they end up getting all turned around and just fly themselves to death.

  • And some artificial lights may even give off low levels of UV light,

  • which insects may mistake for UV signatures from flowers.

  • Some lights give off infrared radiation which can seem like female moth pheromones,

  • which register to male moths in the infrared.

  • In these ways, the light messes with their navigation and may also make it more difficult for insects to find mates,

  • by disrupting their natural patterns.

  • Fireflies, for instance, can’t see each other glow if the whole area is flooded with light!

  • And light also makes it easier to see those bugs, and so they are more susceptible to getting eaten by predators.

  • So even though were not sure exactly why bugs flock to flame,

  • we are sure that artificial light is a driver of insect decline.

  • And noartificial light at night is not driving global decimation of insect species

  • as much as say, habitat loss.

  • But addressing our light usage is something relatively simple we can do to address this issue,

  • and pretty much immediately.

  • Because here’s the kicker.

  • 41% of global insect species have already experienced huge population declines in the past decade.

  • So as this insect species loss continues and acceleratesit will be devastating.

  • Not only for us, but for the whole world’s wider ecosystems.

  • And it’s going to take large-scale change in our land management and our use of pesticides

  • to stop that cataclysmic decline before it’s too late...

  • but changing our light habits is maybe one place to start.

  • If you want to know even more about surprising ecosystem dynamics,

  • check out this video on fungi over here

  • and subscribe to Seeker for all of your ecological updates.

  • Leave a comment down below, and as always, thanks so much for watching.

  • I’ll see you next time.

Have you ever come home from a long day to find your front door swarmed by flying insects?

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