BIRTE PRIEBE
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Precious insects - 10+ simple things you can do to turn your garden into a haven for insects

1/2/2024

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.As a gardener, you can do a lot to provide much-needed food and habitat to pollinators and other insects. Many of the following ideas require less of an effort than you might be putting in at the moment!

  • Make your garden a pesticide-free zone. (If you have a plant that is constantly infested with pests it is probably not happy in your garden - try replacing it with something else.)
  • Reimagine weeds as wildflowers - the difference between a flower and a weed is a judgment.
  • Mow your lawn less often to let flowers pop up.
  • Designate a "wild corner" where you do nothing whatsoever.
  • Most conventional nursery plants contain pesticides. Buy from an organic nursery, grow your own plants from seeds or plant-swap with other gardeners instead.
  • Plant pollinator-friendly flowers (such as lavender, rosemary, marjoram, comfrey, thyme, catmint, hardy geraniums - but not pelargoniums) or sow a wildflower meadow with flowers native to your region.
  • Plant a flowering tree (apple, cherry, willow, lime...)
  • Create a compost heap.
  • Make a log pile or a brash pile (from other parts of trees and shrubs you have chopped off, such as twigs and leaves.)
  • Avoid annual bedding plants (such as busy-lizzies, begonias, petunias, pansies) because they are bred in a way that makes them pretty useless for insects.
  • Stay away from double varieties of roses, cherries, hollyhocks and aquilegia because they are mutants that produce extra petals instead of pollen.
  • Remove any unnecessary sources of light from your garden. They disorient insects, disturb their hormonal clock and make them easy prey.


Random insect fact: Metamorphosing insects are the world's most successful ones - just four groups of them make up 65% of all known species on the planet (flies, bees/ants/wasps, butterflies/moths, beetles).

Are your reading this in the cold season? Find out what you can do for insects in the winter!

Source: Dave Goulson, Silent Earth - Averting the Insect Apocalypse

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Precious insects - what are all these creepy-crawlies actually good for?

18/1/2024

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Well, as a matter of fact, we don't have a clue what most insects do. There are an estimated 5 million insect species on the planet, and we've only named one fifth of them - about one million. However, if you look at what those we actually do know provide for us and the rest of the living world, it becomes clear that losing insect species is potentially catastrophic, even if their ecosystem function hasn't been discovered yet.
Let's take a look at some of the vital contributions insects make to our world:


  • They are at the basis of all terrestrial and freshwater food chains and food webs. The collapse of herbivore insect populations leads to a massive decline of the other insects that prey on them. They in turn are essential food for birds, bats, spiders, reptiles, amphibians, small mammals and fish, and their demise has a domino effect on the whole food chain. Let's not forget here that we humans are at the top of this very food chain.
  • 87 percent of all plant species require animal pollination, of which insects provide the lion's share.
  • About three quarters of all our crop types are also dependent on insect pollination.
  • Insects break down organic matter like fallen leaves, timber, corpses and animal feces. In the process, they recycle valuable nutrients. What happens when these services are no longer provided? When cows were introduced to Australia in the 19th century, there were no local insects who could deal with their dung. The result was that the pastures were drowning in cowpats that took years to decompose, until dung beetles from elsewhere in the world were deliberately introduced to solve the problem.
  • Insects that live in the soil play a major role in soil aeration.
  • Many insects are important pest control agents (though, admittedly, most pests are also insects.) The wasps we are familiar with here in Europe prey on crop pests, for example, and also play a role in plant pollination.
  • Insects can control unwanted or invasive plants.
  • The role of insects as food for humans is something rather new and exotic for us here in Europe, but if you look at the world as a whole, a staggering 80 percent of people regularly consume insects!

With insect numbers in decline everywhere, all of these vital services are threatened. Luckily, every single one of us can take action to help boost insect populations, not only where we live but also in the rest of the world.
If you don't know where to start, I suggest you watch this space - there will be a whole series of Precious Insects posts, starting with 5 simple things you can do for insects in winter
.

Fun insect fact: A favorite dish of Hirohito, the former Emperor of Japan, was boiled wasps with rice.

Source: Dave Goulson, Silent Earth - Averting the Insect Apocalypse
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Precious insects - 5 simple things you can do for them in winter

7/1/2024

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We still have some time to go till spring, and insects are not much in evidence right now. But there is a lot we can do even during winter to make the world a more insect-friendly place. Here are a few simple but powerful things you can apply as of today.
  • Buy local, seasonal and preferably organic products. Organic farmers avoid pesticides and preserve the health of their soils, among other benefits for insects.
  • Eat less meat, particularly beef. Beef production uses a staggering 60% of the world's agricultural land and incredible amounts of pesticides. This could be freed up for nature, providing much-needed habitats for insects.
  • Don't waste food. We waste one third of all the food produced worldwide. Imagine how much more space there could be for nature if we could cut agricultural production by one third!
  • Remove or switch off any unnecessary lights in your garden/on your balcony. They disorient insects and make them easy prey.
  • Don't use flea treatments for your pet that contain neonicotinoids. These are extremely toxic to insects and end up in our soils and water when your dog jumps into a pond, for example.

Fun fact (even though you might also find this a bit scary): The weight of ants on our planet is similar to the total weight of all humans.

Source: Dave Goulson, Silent Earth - Averting the Insect Apocalypse

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The truth about sea monsters

21/9/2023

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You have probably never seen a sea monster. But I am fairly sure that when you think about your childhood, you will remember it as more populated by all kinds of creatures than your surroundings are now. (I for one can recall holidays in Denmark when there were so many ladybugs in the dunes that we were awed and faintly disgusted at the same time because we could not sit down anywhere.) Or maybe your grandparents or parents told you stories involving a natural abundance that would be out of the ordinary today, like my mother who would encounter swarms of June bugs every year and once had to walk on a road that seemed to be paved with frogs. 
 
Sadly, this natural bounty is a thing of the past in many regions of our planet, and we tend to fondly remember our childhood as a time when the world was still buzzing with life. This belief exists alongside the stories we have all heard about the animals that used to roam the countryside even further in the past but are now (almost) extinct – think of wolves and bears in Europe or the bison of North America. Can you imagine that the seas and rivers were once so full of fish that it sometimes looked like you could just wade out into the water and continue walking on the backs of them? These fish were not only more numerous, they were much bigger than the ones that are caught today because due to their sheer abundance, many more reached maturity than is the case now. 
 
So why is it that we don’t use these historical levels of biodiversity as our benchmark when we think about nature today, but keep referring to our own childhood experience in comparison – an experience of a fauna that was already severely depleted? It looks like while we are intellectually able to grasp what the world had lost in terms of richness even before we were born, only our childhood experience resonates with us emotionally.  
 
The explanation for this skewed perception is what is known as shifting baseline syndrome. In Wilding, Isabella Tree defines it as a “continuous lowering of standards and the acceptance of degraded natural ecosystems” that, in a nutshell, stems from us clinging unconsciously to what we considered “natural” when growing up. The problem according to Tree is that each generation creates a new definition of what is “natural”, so when the baseline drops it is considered the new normal, leading us to suffer from “pre-baseline amnesia”. Or, as George Monbiot puts it in Feral, “ours is a dwarf and remnant fauna, and as its size and abundance decline, so do our expectations, imperceptibly eroding to match the limitations of the present.” Even scientists have a hard time freeing themselves from these preconceptions.
 
But what has this got to do with sea monsters? Over hundreds of years sailors kept reporting encounters with huge creatures like the legendary kraken, some of them allegedly big enough to toss a ship into the air. Modern-day scientists believe that the most likely marine animal behind these sightings is the giant squid, an elusive denizen of the deep seas that is big enough to grapple with sperm whales, often leaving them with enormous scars from its suction cups. The rest, it is thought, are tall tales, yarns spun by seamen terrified of the unfathomable depths beneath the hulls of their ships. 
 
But just imagine for a moment that this could be just another case of “pre-baseline amnesia”. What if there actually were creatures then that were even bigger than giant squid but that simply no longer exist? Or what if giant squid were even more gigantic back then? What if “there lived dragons where none live now”, to borrow one of George Monbiot’s phrases? 

We will probably never know the truth about sea monsters, but we can at least try to open our eyes to the actual degradation of our environment and attempt to restore some of its old glory, for example by rewilding.
 
Quotes and inspiration:
Isabella Tree, Wilding
George Monbiot, Feral
Mark Kurlansky, Cod
Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass


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    Illustrated Thoughts

    Hi, I'm Birte and I make (live) illustrations. This is where I express myself in words and images about topics that have made me think.

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