Oliver Milman

The Insect Crisis: The Fall of the Tiny Empires That Run the World

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***A Waterstones Best Books of 2022 pick***

A New Scientist Book of the Year
Shortlisted for the Wainwright Prize for Conservation Writing

'Fascinating… There is something wondrous in Milman's revelation of our fragile dependency on insect life as well as its beauty and strangeness.' Guardian
'Gripping and especially unnerving.' David Wallace-Wells
When is the last time you were stung by a wasp? Or were followed by a cloud of midges? Or saw a butterfly? All these normal occurrences are becoming much rarer. A groundswell of research suggests insect numbers are in serious decline all over the world — in some places by over 90%.
The Insect Crisis explores this hidden emergency, arguing that its consequences could even rival climate change. We rely on insect pollination for the bulk of our agriculture, they are a prime food source for birds and fish, and they are a key strut holding up life on Earth, especially our own.
In a compelling and entertaining investigation spanning the globe, Milman speaks to the scientists and entomologists studying this catastrophe and asks why these extraordinary creatures are disappearing. Part warning, part celebration of the incredible variety of insects, this book highlights why we need to wake up to this impending environmental disaster.
This book is currently unavailable
367 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2022
Publication year
2022
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Quotes

  • Lina Vargas Fonsecahas quoted5 hours ago
    The alarm over insect declines has been rung intermittently for some time, if not quite as loudly as now. As early as 1936, Edith Patch, the first female president of the Entomological Society of America, gave a speech decrying the expanding use of insecticides on fruit and vegetable crops.
  • Lina Vargas Fonsecahas quoted5 hours ago
    But these creatures—so numerous that they are both unknowable and annoying, so odd looking that they inspire the forms of malevolent beings in horror movies, and so vital that we would perish without them—now appear to be suffering a silent existential crisis.
  • Lina Vargas Fonsecahas quoted5 hours ago
    “Each one is like an alien life form with a detailed life history that often is so bizarre, you couldn’t create it as fiction if you wanted to.” As dizzyingly diverse as insects are, they share a remarkably consistent body design comprising three segments—head, thorax, and abdomen—three pairs of jointed legs, compound eyes, antenna, and an external skeleton.
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