Date: 24/01/2020 15:17:19
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1490316
Subject: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

A single mayfly is a delicate creature—with its long, slender body, translucent wings, and two or three thread-like tails. But in the summertime, hordes of mayflies emerge from lakes and rivers to form swarms so dense that clouds of the insects have been known to blanket cars and envelop gas stations.

These swarms are as impressive as they are annoying. Because mayflies thrive in unpolluted waters, their appearance en masse is also a good sign that aquatic ecosystems are functioning as they should. It is disconcerting, then, that a new study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has found that mayfly swarms are not as large as they once were.

Because swarms of mating mayflies can number in the billions, they are often visible on weather radar. The authors of the new study analyzed radar data from between 2012 and 2019, using the size of the swarms to estimate populations along the the Upper Mississippi River and Western Lake Erie Basin. Their calculations suggest that the number of mayflies in the Mississippi River region has declined by 52 percent since 2012. Around Lake Erie, populations have gone down by 84 percent.

The drop in mayfly numbers suggest that water quality in these regions is not optimal. According to the study authors, a number of factors could be contributing to the decline. First, warming water temperatures caused by climate change may be disrupting oxygen circulation and the insects’ life cycle, according to National Geographic. Another possible culprit is fertilizer runoff from farms, which have been triggering algal blooms in Lake Erie. Algal blooms release toxins into the environment, to which mayflies are “highly sensitive,” according to the researchers.

Pesticides are also flowing into the Great Lakes tributaries. One 2018 study, for instance, found that concentrations of the neonicotinoid class of insecticides was up to 40 times higher than acceptable limits set by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Aquatic Life Benchmark. The mayfly species Hexagenia, on which the new study focused, “are among the most sensitive aquatic insects to a suite of these commonly applied pesticides,” the researchers write.

The reduction in mayfly numbers is also disconcerting because these insects play a crucial role in the food chain. As underwater nymphs, they act as a crucial food source for fish and wading birds; once they emerge onto land, they are eaten by other insects, birds and bats.

Mayflies are hardly alone in their decline. A report published last year found that more than 40 percent of insect species are at threatened by extinction, due to factors like habitat loss, chemical pollution, invasive species and climate change. This alarming trend has been dubbed the “insect apocalypse”—and it is sure to have ripple effects.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/massive-mayfly-swarms-are-getting-smaller-180974046/

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 07:42:38
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1490680
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

PermeateFree said:


A single mayfly is a delicate creature—with its long, slender body, translucent wings, and two or three thread-like tails. But in the summertime, hordes of mayflies emerge from lakes and rivers to form swarms so dense that clouds of the insects have been known to blanket cars and envelop gas stations.

These swarms are as impressive as they are annoying. Because mayflies thrive in unpolluted waters, their appearance en masse is also a good sign that aquatic ecosystems are functioning as they should. It is disconcerting, then, that a new study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has found that mayfly swarms are not as large as they once were.

Because swarms of mating mayflies can number in the billions, they are often visible on weather radar. The authors of the new study analyzed radar data from between 2012 and 2019, using the size of the swarms to estimate populations along the the Upper Mississippi River and Western Lake Erie Basin. Their calculations suggest that the number of mayflies in the Mississippi River region has declined by 52 percent since 2012. Around Lake Erie, populations have gone down by 84 percent.

The drop in mayfly numbers suggest that water quality in these regions is not optimal. According to the study authors, a number of factors could be contributing to the decline. First, warming water temperatures caused by climate change may be disrupting oxygen circulation and the insects’ life cycle, according to National Geographic. Another possible culprit is fertilizer runoff from farms, which have been triggering algal blooms in Lake Erie. Algal blooms release toxins into the environment, to which mayflies are “highly sensitive,” according to the researchers.

Pesticides are also flowing into the Great Lakes tributaries. One 2018 study, for instance, found that concentrations of the neonicotinoid class of insecticides was up to 40 times higher than acceptable limits set by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Aquatic Life Benchmark. The mayfly species Hexagenia, on which the new study focused, “are among the most sensitive aquatic insects to a suite of these commonly applied pesticides,” the researchers write.

The reduction in mayfly numbers is also disconcerting because these insects play a crucial role in the food chain. As underwater nymphs, they act as a crucial food source for fish and wading birds; once they emerge onto land, they are eaten by other insects, birds and bats.

Mayflies are hardly alone in their decline. A report published last year found that more than 40 percent of insect species are at threatened by extinction, due to factors like habitat loss, chemical pollution, invasive species and climate change. This alarming trend has been dubbed the “insect apocalypse”—and it is sure to have ripple effects.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/massive-mayfly-swarms-are-getting-smaller-180974046/

Maytfly numbers would have been exceptionally low in 1947-1951 when all their habitats were sprayed with DDT and similar insicticides as part of the successful project to eliminate malaria from the USA.

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 11:12:05
From: Ogmog
ID: 1490730
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

I witnessed an emergence years ago.

“Oooo Look!” an unattractive insect crawled out of the river, split open
and flew away having transformed into a delicate winged creature. :)

“Oooo! ANOTHER One!”

“…and ANOTHER…!”

As I looked around I saw that they were climbing up the bridge I was sitting on
as well as every rock & tree in the area! o-8=

Hmmm interesting.

At nightfall, I was treated to a glorious display of thousands of Little Brown Bats
flapping around mere inches from my face & body! :-D -kewl

Neonicotinoids … “they” done threw out the baby with the bathwater on this one.

The Crop & Forestry Industry decided to; “Kill’em ALL & Let GOD Sort’em Out!” >:-p

Not only has it devastated the FoodWeb, ** but in doing so, LIFE As We KNEW It. :-(

**+ every beneficial insect that kept everything humming along In Balance. r.i.p.

btw, this is also the Key to “Colony Collapse Syndrome”

as Freddie Mercury asked; “Who Wants To Live Forever?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jtpf8N5IDE

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:09:48
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1490888
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Ogmog said:


I witnessed an emergence years ago.

“Oooo Look!” an unattractive insect crawled out of the river, split open
and flew away having transformed into a delicate winged creature. :)

“Oooo! ANOTHER One!”

“…and ANOTHER…!”

As I looked around I saw that they were climbing up the bridge I was sitting on
as well as every rock & tree in the area! o-8=

Hmmm interesting.

At nightfall, I was treated to a glorious display of thousands of Little Brown Bats
flapping around mere inches from my face & body! :-D -kewl

Neonicotinoids … “they” done threw out the baby with the bathwater on this one.

The Crop & Forestry Industry decided to; “Kill’em ALL & Let GOD Sort’em Out!” >:-p

Not only has it devastated the FoodWeb, ** but in doing so, LIFE As We KNEW It. :-(

**+ every beneficial insect that kept everything humming along In Balance. r.i.p.

btw, this is also the Key to “Colony Collapse Syndrome”

as Freddie Mercury asked; “Who Wants To Live Forever?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jtpf8N5IDE

Ogmog, you just nailed the importance of these events.

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:24:54
From: Michael V
ID: 1490892
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

PermeateFree said:


Ogmog said:

I witnessed an emergence years ago.

“Oooo Look!” an unattractive insect crawled out of the river, split open
and flew away having transformed into a delicate winged creature. :)

“Oooo! ANOTHER One!”

“…and ANOTHER…!”

As I looked around I saw that they were climbing up the bridge I was sitting on
as well as every rock & tree in the area! o-8=

Hmmm interesting.

At nightfall, I was treated to a glorious display of thousands of Little Brown Bats
flapping around mere inches from my face & body! :-D -kewl

Neonicotinoids … “they” done threw out the baby with the bathwater on this one.

The Crop & Forestry Industry decided to; “Kill’em ALL & Let GOD Sort’em Out!” >:-p

Not only has it devastated the FoodWeb, ** but in doing so, LIFE As We KNEW It. :-(

**+ every beneficial insect that kept everything humming along In Balance. r.i.p.

btw, this is also the Key to “Colony Collapse Syndrome”

as Freddie Mercury asked; “Who Wants To Live Forever?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jtpf8N5IDE

Ogmog, you just nailed the importance of these events.

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:28:36
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 1490893
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Michael V said:


PermeateFree said:

Ogmog said:

I witnessed an emergence years ago.

“Oooo Look!” an unattractive insect crawled out of the river, split open
and flew away having transformed into a delicate winged creature. :)

“Oooo! ANOTHER One!”

“…and ANOTHER…!”

As I looked around I saw that they were climbing up the bridge I was sitting on
as well as every rock & tree in the area! o-8=

Hmmm interesting.

At nightfall, I was treated to a glorious display of thousands of Little Brown Bats
flapping around mere inches from my face & body! :-D -kewl

Neonicotinoids … “they” done threw out the baby with the bathwater on this one.

The Crop & Forestry Industry decided to; “Kill’em ALL & Let GOD Sort’em Out!” >:-p

Not only has it devastated the FoodWeb, ** but in doing so, LIFE As We KNEW It. :-(

**+ every beneficial insect that kept everything humming along In Balance. r.i.p.

btw, this is also the Key to “Colony Collapse Syndrome”

as Freddie Mercury asked; “Who Wants To Live Forever?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jtpf8N5IDE

Ogmog, you just nailed the importance of these events.

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

Homo Sapiens?

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:31:11
From: ChrispenEvan
ID: 1490894
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Michael V said:


PermeateFree said:

Ogmog said:

I witnessed an emergence years ago.

“Oooo Look!” an unattractive insect crawled out of the river, split open
and flew away having transformed into a delicate winged creature. :)

“Oooo! ANOTHER One!”

“…and ANOTHER…!”

As I looked around I saw that they were climbing up the bridge I was sitting on
as well as every rock & tree in the area! o-8=

Hmmm interesting.

At nightfall, I was treated to a glorious display of thousands of Little Brown Bats
flapping around mere inches from my face & body! :-D -kewl

Neonicotinoids … “they” done threw out the baby with the bathwater on this one.

The Crop & Forestry Industry decided to; “Kill’em ALL & Let GOD Sort’em Out!” >:-p

Not only has it devastated the FoodWeb, ** but in doing so, LIFE As We KNEW It. :-(

**+ every beneficial insect that kept everything humming along In Balance. r.i.p.

btw, this is also the Key to “Colony Collapse Syndrome”

as Freddie Mercury asked; “Who Wants To Live Forever?”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Jtpf8N5IDE

Ogmog, you just nailed the importance of these events.

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

https://tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/?main=https%3A//tokyo3.org/forums/holiday/topics/12788/

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:31:25
From: Michael V
ID: 1490895
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Witty Rejoinder said:


Michael V said:

PermeateFree said:

Ogmog, you just nailed the importance of these events.

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

Homo Sapiens?

Yes.

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:56:30
From: Tamb
ID: 1490899
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Michael V said:


Witty Rejoinder said:

Michael V said:

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

Homo Sapiens?

Yes.

These days it’s homo not-so-sapiens.

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 16:59:50
From: Ogmog
ID: 1490901
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Michael V said:


Witty Rejoinder said:

Michael V said:

It’s a pity that the apex predator is in plague proportions.

Eventually that’ll change…

Homo Sapiens?

Yes.

The cruel joke is
that just as we’re about to figured it all out
we came to realize that we brought it all to an untimely demise

homo sapien (wise man)
just out smarted himself

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 17:00:38
From: party_pants
ID: 1490903
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Tamb said:


Michael V said:

Witty Rejoinder said:

Homo Sapiens?

Yes.

These days it’s homo not-so-sapiens.

I thought we’d reclassified ourselves as homo sapiens sapiens.

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 17:06:09
From: Ogmog
ID: 1490905
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

Ogmog said:


Michael V said:

Witty Rejoinder said:

Homo Sapiens?

Yes.

The cruel joke is
that just as we’re about to figured it all out
we came to realize that we brought it all to an untimely demise

homo sapien (wise man)
just out smarted himself


George Carlin described it as
just another failed experiment: an evolutionary cul de sac
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UfJhPbFW6qk

Reply Quote

Date: 25/01/2020 17:06:14
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1490906
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

party_pants said:


Tamb said:

Michael V said:

Yes.

These days it’s homo not-so-sapiens.

I thought we’d reclassified ourselves as homo sapiens sapiens.

No that was when we considered the Neanderthal a subspecies of us (Homo sapiens neanderthal), but each have now been reclassified into separate species.

Reply Quote

Date: 26/01/2020 15:29:26
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1491308
Subject: re: Massive Mayfly Swarms Are Getting Smaller—and That’s Bad News for Aquatic Ecosystems

PermeateFree said:


party_pants said:

Tamb said:

These days it’s homo not-so-sapiens.

I thought we’d reclassified ourselves as homo sapiens sapiens.

No that was when we considered the Neanderthal a subspecies of us (Homo sapiens neanderthal), but each have now been reclassified into separate species.

That’s right, but it seems a bit weird. The definition of “species” has to become uncertain when H. sapiens interbreeds not just with a different species but also with the species two genetic shifts away.

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