GuyGadebois wrote:... déblatérations ...
You understand nothing of what you are told, and use it as a pretext for personal attacks.
We always have the feeling that you think you are in a competition of animals.
GuyGadebois wrote:... déblatérations ...
VetusLignum wrote:...
The author, living around Bordeaux, continues to denounce "the destruction of nature", in particular, the grinding of grassy areas, which destroys both wild plants and the insects that live on them.
This grinding is probably done for the sake of cleanliness.
...
Exnihiloest wrote:These grindings are not new, while the acceleration of the disappearance of insects is recent. So even if it contributes to their decline, it is surely not the main reason, moreover it is very unlikely that there is only one, it is certainly multifactorial.
Scientists accuse intensive farming, but the question is far from being that simple.
https://lactualite.com/sante-et-science ... -insects/
izentrop wrote:You are in France ? I thought I understood that you were in a country that is really annoyed with the brexit that is imposed on it?VetusLignum wrote: in France, we have local authorities who seem not to know what to do with their money.
We keep tidying up nature so we have lots of grassland and parkland with no dandelions or clover or other wildflowers and the bumblebees die of hunger.
https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/h ... 37384.html
VetusLignum wrote:Here, the bumblebees disappear. We don't even talk about butterflies anymore ...
Ok, you confirm me;)VetusLignum wrote:Here, the bumblebees disappear. We don't even talk about butterflies anymore ...
We keep tidying up nature so we have lots of grassland and parkland with no dandelions or clover or other wildflowers and the bumblebees die of hunger.
In France it must be little better for bumblebees, given the eagerness of people to get on their mower tractor and this unhealthy need for cleanliness, driven by consumerism ..."What's going on with our bumblebees is a huge problem. Hunger is killing them. They are literally starving," she said.
“They come out of hibernation in February and March and need the nectar from flowering plants for food, but the way we manage the landscape now means there aren't enough flowers.
«We keep tidying up the nature, so we have a lot of meadows and parks without dandelions, clover or other wild flowers and the bumblebees are starving.
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