From ants scurrying under leaf litter to bees able to fly higher than Mount Kilimanjaro, insects are everywhere. Three out of every four of our planet’s known animal species are insects. In The Insect Crisis, acclaimed journalist Oliver Milman dives into the torrent of recent evidence that suggests this kaleidoscopic group of creatures is suffering the greatest existential crisis in its remarkable 400-million-year history. What is causing the collapse of the insect world? Why does this alarming decline pose such a threat to us? And what can be done to stem the loss of the miniature empires that hold aloft life as we know it?
With urgency and great clarity, Milman explores this hidden emergency, arguing that its consequences could even rival climate change. He joins the scientists tracking the decline of insect populations across the globe, including the soaring mountains of Mexico that host an epic, yet dwindling, migration of monarch butterflies; the verdant countryside of England that has been emptied of insect life; the gargantuan fields of U.S. agriculture that have proved a killing ground for bees; and an offbeat experiment in Denmark that shows there aren’t that many bugs splattering into your car windshield these days. These losses not only further tear at the tapestry of life on our degraded planet; they imperil everything we hold dear, from the food on our supermarket shelves to the medicines in our cabinets to the riot of nature that thrills and enlivens us. Even insects we may dread, including the hated cockroach, or the stinging wasp, play crucial ecological roles, and their decline would profoundly shape our own story.
By connecting butterfly and bee, moth and beetle from across the globe, the full scope of loss renders a portrait of a crisis that threatens to upend the workings of our collective history. Part warning, part celebration of the incredible variety of insects, The Insect Crisis is a wake-up call for us all.
Have you noticed less insects in your lifetime? In my 80 years, interested in the natural world, I certainly have.
This book is a stark review of the sweeping, all too obvious evidence of the accelerating insect crisis. It explains and explores the unfolding crisis, what all is causing it, and what can be done to stem the loss of the miniature empires that are keystones to life as we know it on our little blue canoe. It even explains some of climate change’s vicious paradoxes, such as why a warming climate will cause monarch butterflies to freeze to death.
Some may think this book alarmist, but I think it takes an appropriate tone given the seriousness of the subject matter, and the author does fairly present all sides in the scientific community and beneficial efforts to stem the crisis.
Save for maybe some butterflies and bees, too many of us don't fancy pesky, creepy-crawly, biting insects — an all to common attitude. Not enough humans understand the critical ecosystem roles that insect biodiverse populations play in our being, and many are apathetic in their immediate profit-centric mindsets. Additionally, younger generations may be subject to "Shifting Baseline" syndrome.
As an example, honey bees, which we employ to work in poisoned, monocropped environments, are only holding on with increasing assistance (themselves a livestock money crop). Other wild bee species, just as important to our environment, are faring much worse, having increasingly declined 75 to 95 percent in many regions of the world over the last century. I won't even get started on the other countless insect species we depend on, of which too many have been found to be diminishing at accelerating rates, and we don't know all the insect species and their ecological roles.
Read the prologue of this book (with the Amazon Look inside feature), if you dare, to understand the consequences of the world we are creating on our present course. The ignorance and greed of much of humanity has the pedal to the metal in our relentless drive to the abyss, in too many cases simply thinking we'll be fine without much of the biodiversity.
Actually, the whole book is a must read, even if you don't like insects or are ambivalent. It will give you an idea of how much our existence depends on insect populations and their biodiversity.
The maddening aspect of declining and disappearing insects worldwide, save for such as bed bugs and cockroaches, is that this is one of the easier environmental degradation issues to stem, and one where individuals could make a genuine difference (the uplifting aspect of this book with exemplary successes).
This is a book I would highly recommend for our and our children's sake. We can reassure ourselves that we can survive in a diminishing environment, but the pace of changes in the biosphere threatens to make such wishful thinking.
"By flattening and poisoning our landscapes, altering the chemical composition of our atmosphere, and creating biological deserts in the pursuit of progress and aestheticism [e.g. beautiful lawns], we are conducting a high-stakes experiment with hideous risks." ~ Oliver Milman
I work in a sister field to conservation so it is a close topic to my heart and I have to say that I did not know or think about conservation of insects almost ever beyond the headline grabbing “Save the Bees” campaign or monarch butterflies.
This book was really eye opening and I think it is accessible to almost anyone. It definitely gave me messaging that I can use in my interactions with people through my job. If you want to help native animals including birds then you can help BUGS. And its not even that hard. There is a part in this where they talk about a campaign of ‘doing less’ so you don’t even have to do anything! Just do less: less lawn maintenance and less pesticides and herbicides. You can have your own conservation project in YOUR YARD. It was just a super cool idea and I totally plan on using it to encourage people on how they can help. Bugs feed other animals. By helping their population you are helping conservation.
There was super cool insect facts throughout. The author had a good sense of humor and the writing style and formatting kept it interesting and never too repetitive or dull which can happen with even interesting non-fiction sometimes. Hearing about how windshields used to be covered in bugs on road trips and thinking about how it just doesn’t happen anymore was pretty shocking to think about. Lots of numbers that are plummeting and depressing but overall there is such a good message of hope and what you can do in this book.
There are also chapters about the ‘save the bees’ and monarchs if that is all you know, you probably don’t know all of it. I found myself super interested in the bee industry and sad about the future of monarchs.
But anyways, buy native plants! Let your yard be a little more natural! You can help the world be a slightly more buzzy place (which is annoying for us but great for literally everything else).
Thank you to Netgalley and Highbridge audio for this audiobook copy. This was narrated by Liam Gerrad who did great and I would recommend the audiobook format.
Its not your imagination. The insects that used to be all around you every summer are indeed not coming back this summer, or next summer, or ever. Too many pesticides, too much habitat destruction, and worst of all, too hot. So what you say? Good riddance you say? The problem is fruits are pollinated by a lot of the disappearing insects - and its not just about the honeybees, either. Many other insects are, or rather used to, pollinate vegetables, fruits and flowers. The birds that eat insects aren't doing so well either. Do you have any idea of how much poop and dead things there would be about us if insects weren't on the job of eating or using what to them are stuff that sustains them in one way or another? Butterflies, omg, the butterflies are also disappearing. They do nothing but beautify our lives. Dying, dead, gone.
Are we imagining we aren't seeing the usual buzzing clouds harassing us every summer? No. Oliver Milan's book 'The Insect Crisis: The Fall of the Tiny Empires That Run the World' provides the proofs of scientific studies along with personal anecdotes of people who are either amateurs or professional observers of the natural world.
New kinds of insects are moving into areas that are not their normal environments due to global warming. This is not really a good thing. For one thing, these new neighbors are often infected with deadly disease-carrying mites and bacteria. For another, they cannot replace the huge variety of insects who have died or are dying off as the new guys moving in are not coming in the numbers representative of the large variety of insects they are replacing.
This book can seem hyperbolic, but it isn't. It really isn't. The insects ARE disappearing. I have seen this with my own eyes in the six decades of my life. Drive your car down any country road in August. Then get out and inspect the grill work in front of your car. Unlike thirty years ago, there will barely be enough dead smashed insects there to require more than one paper towel to wipe them off. I haven't seen a bumblebee in years. As I am a magnet for biting bugs, I've noticed I barely have the usual number of itchy bites I get for the last five summers. Yes, I am concerned because I love birds. Birds love mosquitoes, and for some birds mosquitoes are their meat and potatoes.
An excellent, thoughtful and thorough review on what we know about the decline of insects. All insects, not just the ones that are "good" for us. Domesticated bees are like chicken and having them represent all the diversity isn't constructive to the cause. Without insects dead or rotting material of all sorts would not disappear nearly as fast, for example.
We all have a story that we can relate to in terms of how impoverished our surroundings are becoming. I remember driving through central Europe in 1999 and being incredibly grateful to the gas station attendant who washed our windscreen clear of bugs, it was cm thick. This doesn't happen anymore. I drove from southern Norway to northern Finland in 2020 and there was hardly a bug. Certainly nothing that warranted any additional windscreen cleaning. Actually, the situation is so dire that I don't kill any "pests" on my plants anymore, not even by hand, much less with any toxins. The lawn is left mostly uncut, to leave a little breather of "wilderness". Did you know that lawn grass is the most cultivated crop in the United States? It would be funny, except it isn't. It's just a green desert that could be used differently. Even just cutting it less often would make a difference.
It's hard to know what the world will look like in 50 or 100 years, but surely it will be much impoverished, given how drastically the biodiversity has been reduced in my lifetime. Close by, so that I notice. Back in 2000, I took my friends on a walk through a meadow teeming with butterflies and other insects. However, we ended up running out of there, with a cloud of mosquitoes and other blood sucking insects following us. That doesn't happen anymore either.
It's not fearmongering. It's real and every little thing that we do for a positive impact could potentially make the future for coming generations a little brighter. I do not want to live in a world without butterflies. And if the insects go, there are so many other creatures that will be starved into extinction that it does not bear thinking about.
Every once in a while, I find a book that changes the way I view the world. This is certainly one of them. I've been a lifelong environmentalist but somehow missed the importance of insects till now. And I had just pulled some dandelions from my yard but, fortunately, didn't finish the job. I will now leave the remainder to feed the pollinators. California poppies are also emerging all over my yard after the rains. When they bloom, they will also feed the pollinators.
A few notable quotes:
Page 214: The vast tracts of land we've turned into biodiversity deserts are in many cases not even directly feeding people -- a third of all viable cropland is used to produce feed for livestock, which themselves take up a quarter of the planet's ice-free habitat. Mealworms and crickets, both excellent sources of protein that can multiply to enormous numbers in tight spaces, are a less destructive alternative to traditional Western diets and would help ease agricultural-driven pressures that blight insects, such as climate change, chemical use, and land degradation. "They are also delicious," says ... an entomologist.
My comment: Years ago, I raised mealworms and fried them in butter. They were crunchy with a nutty flavor. Even one of my kids dared to eat some.
Page 219: It's an arrogant presumption that we will sail unscathed through the sixth mass extinction without the diversity of insect life we are laying to waste. We need them far more than they need us. The insect crisis is, from our own self-interested point of view, a human emergency.
This book is terrifying. It's definitely an introduction to the problem of what is happening to insects and how that will affect the planet, and doesn't go far into presenting solutions, but considering how much of the data here was unknown to me, even if I knew the general 'idea' (Like that bees are dying), I think it's important to read. The information is presented well and clearly, and is not bogged down with anything except the stuff the reader really needs to know. I would recommend this book to mostly everyone.
Near the end of the book, Milman goes into how butterflies are dying off in large numbers for essentially a whole chapter and then ends with something that really affected me. I did the audiobook so I can't quote it exactly, but to paraphrase it- "It's actually incredible that for all the efforts going into saving the butterfly population, butterflies are perhaps the only insect we don't need. They aren't a major food source for other animals, and won't really have a noticeable effect if they were to be driven to extinction. But they are pretty, they are harmless, and most people like them. This recalls to mind Winston Churchill's response in WW2 when it was suggested he cut funding to the arts, he responded "Then what would we be fighting for?"
So yeah, read this book if you want an even better idea of how we're destroying the planet and gain some more anxiety you can do nothing about!
"We are at the beginning of a major extinction level event [...] things are just going to get worse if humanity chooses to do nothing differently."
That statement just about sums up the message in "The Insect Crisis." I was aware of the issue that the book covers so what really hit me reading it, was the sheer scale of the crisis. It's gobsmackingly and alarm-blaringly shocking to me. I am at a legitimate loss for words (which, to those who know me, likely says quite a lot).
Milman, journalist and environment correspondent at the Guardian, does a great job here. The book is both easy to read and accessible, and it lends a weight to the message that defies the digestible format a bit. But really, that could just be the numbers that he cites - once you start talking about 90+ percent population declines in a couple of years, yeah, it's like running into a wall. But I also think it's a testament to Milman's use of language and the very much spot-on analogies he employs so adroitly:
"While the hideous fire and flooding of the climate crisis is starting to resemble a Hieronymus Bosch painting, the decline of insects is more like a partly hidden Picasso. Invisible to us in parts, slightly misshapen and ambiguous in others."
The book paints a pretty dire picture for us. "Most of life on earth would disappear if we didn't have insects. And if there were any humans left, they wouldn't be having much fun." Because, in true human fashion we are, of course, managing to fuck up the very thing we depend on. By means of everything from our vanity of the perfect lawn and leaf blowers, through monocultures and pesticides, to our destruction of habitats and anthropogenic climate change. In fact, we likely couldn't have done a better job of killing insects off if we'd been trying to - and, spoiler alert, in the case of pesticides that is indeed exactly what we are trying to do.
Additionally, even when we are actively trying to keep insects alive, we still often fuck it up - I'm thinking here, of course, of honeybees. Milman illustrates the phenomenon admirably - albeit, I think, not deliberately - when he claims that, "[h]oneybees are not much different from tiny flying cows or pigs." Humans are, after all, pretty shit at taking care of these animals as well.
However, Milman isn't all doom and gloom. He points out that insects, in general, are really good at recovering, given the chance. And it really doesn't take very much in the way of human intervention to turn this crisis around. Other than easing up on pesticides (which, as he mentions, might actually be a net positive for production anyway), it's sometimes as easy as having a bit of biodiversity growing at the edges of fields and in our gardens. Considering what's at stake, that doesn't seem too hard from my perspective.
This book examines the impact of the current sixth mass extinction on Earth's insect populations, utilizing both scientific data and empirical evidence to explain the rapid decline of insect species. Insect populations are currently diminishing at a rate of ten percent per decade, and in some regions, the populations are on the verge of complete collapse. This is due to a combination of factors, including climate change, the use of pesticides and herbicides, urban development, pollution, the replacement of native plants, and the decline of animal life.
The empirical data is the most profound evidence in the book. If you are old enough, like me, I'm 45, you remember a time when insects were abundant. I recall being stung a dozen times over the years by various bees, as they were everywhere; sometimes hundreds could be seen on a single patch of land, especially when the red clover bloomed on Long Island. I used to love being barefoot, but after a few stings, I would wear shoes or sandals on the grass. Baseball teams were just colors back then, and I was on the yellow team one year, and we were harassed by bees and yellowjackets the entire season because they were attracted to the color. Various species of butterflies, locusts, and crickets could be found very easily. Praying mantis and large dragonflies were not unusual. Lightning bugs lit up the night, giving childhood summers a magical vibe. Black hornets were my favorite as a child, and you could attract them if you created a mound of mud. Black Hornets are feared, but they leave you alone if you do not bother them, and this book also talks about maligned insects that serve important roles on this planet. We need to take care of all life because we can not survive without them.
There are some things you can do to help insects and the environment.
1. Plant native species that can support your local insect populations. Even if you live in an apartment, a few flower pots can help insects.
2. Never use pesticides and herbicides! There are many good organic gardening channels on YouTube where you can learn about organic gardening. It is easy and fun.
3. Replace lawns with native plants. Lawns offer no benefits to nature and the insect population. You can grow food for yourselves and grow pollinators for the insects. It will add beauty to your neighborhood, and you will be giving back to nature.
4. Be smart with your money. Try to buy from ethical, environmentally safe companies. This is not always easy but companies do listen when it affects their bottom line. I emailed a company because I liked their product, but did not like the plastic packaging the product came in, and they said they received this complaint from various customers and changed to glass bottles within the year. You do have a voice and money, so use them both wisely.
5. Be sure to vote for candidates that support environmentalism. I am writing this in 2025, where we have a party (the republicans) that is openly hostile towards the environment. It is sad when people see environmental degradation as progress, but we are living in dystopian times, and this type of binary thought is extremely dangerous.
6. Talk to people about environmental issues, but always in a polite manner, and use the Socratic method. I was once approached by a right-wing neighbor who did not like environmentalists; he believed that environmentalism was coming for his job and vehicle. I listened to his plight and asked him a series of questions, like Do you like clean air and water? Do you like fresh, healthy food that is not contaminated with heavy metals and pesticides? He begrudgingly said yes to all, and I told him he sounded like an environmentalist. I asked him if he recycled his garbage. Yes, and he even volunteered information. He composted food waste in his yard and gardened. Environmentalism is a natural state of mind, so talk to people about these issues.
Milman convincingly argues that insect populations in general are in steep decline and that spells trouble for all of us. The writing is straightforward and compelling while managing to avoid histrionics.
The causes are numerous and are described well without bogging down the reading experience.
Many of us with outdoor space can do something to help. This book provides some useful examples.
An excellent book. As the title suggests, the book is about an insect crisis: due to climate change, insecticides, habitat loss, etc (ie. HUMANS), insects are dying off, and the world is in trouble. Insects are crucial for pollination, decomposition, and as a food source for birds and other animals, and humans are killing them. Without insects, we're screwed.
The Insect Crisis was such an interesting read and I was engaged from the first page. I like to read on my commute, and several people who saw me reading the book would ask me about it, which made me happy, as I highly recommend it.
*Bangs pots and pans* GUYS THE INSECTS ARE DYING!!!
But seriously, even in my own experience prior to reading this book I feel like insects haven't been as abundant as they were in my childhood. I remember chasing monarch butterflies as a kid and seeing dragonflies, sometimes even the rare firefly in parks in the evening. I haven't seen either of the three in quite a long time. And the book, which seems extensively researched, confirms this. Insect populations around the world are plummeting for a variety of reasons: loss of habitat, climate change, pesticide use, urbanisation, the list goes on. And while insects are arguably the most adaptive and resilient of animals, they can't deal with all these pressures at the same time.
To make matters worse, asides from a few "pretty privileged" species, people don't really care about insects in general. I'll be the first to admit that I'm far less moved when I hear mosquitos, or beetle, or, cockroaches, or whatever are in decline. But as the book shows, everything is connected and necessary. If that mosquito you hate so much were to disappear then perhaps that bird or bat would disappear. Which would cause that flower to disappear. Which would cause that rabbit to disappear. And all the while you're sitting there in this colourless world wondering why life sucks so much.
The book does a decent job explaining all of this but to be honest, much of my interest and enjoyment came from a preexisting interest in the topic. Certain sections felt overly dense, and just contained fact after statistic after percentage. and after a while you start feeling numb to it while reading. Insect crisis was at its best when it took one particular animal and fully fleshed out the impact that it had, like the chapter on bees. I'm not sure how to describe it but I felt like the "pacing" was off, (idk if that makes sense, I know this is a nonfiction book).
All in all, this was a fine book, with an interesting topic, and something I hope to learn more about. Also, insects are pretty cool.
Everything I am into when it comes to the changes our planet is facing & really helped me write my own essay surrounding a similar topic (+ how it is capitalism to blame).
Thank you Netgalley for the advance eBook copy of The Insect Crisis by Oliver Mailman in exchange for an honest review.
It is incredibly evident that the author, Oliver Milman, has put in exhaustive amounts of research and heart into this book. Before reading "The Insect Crisis", I knew that the world was already in trouble with honeybee colony collapse disorder and heavily used pesticides negatively impacting pollinators worldwide. However, I didn't even know the tip of the preverbal iceberg when it came to the catastrophe awaiting us—and already occurring—with the global decline in insect populations.
This is not a happy read, nor an easy one due to the sheer amount of information shared. There was no perfect bow to tie it together at the end or an uplifting message of hope because, as the title says, this is a crisis. Instead, Milman focuses on the fragile interdependence of humanity and insect life, and the scientists who continue to research knowing that the balance is shattering.
I for one know that I will never look at a little bug the same way again...
3.5 stars because my little brain can’t deal with all of these facts one after the other. Maybe I need to read more nonfiction…exercise this puppy 🧠
Over the past year or so, I’ve really garnered an appreciation for insects and other various “creepy crawlies”. This book really helped to make that appreciation so much more vast. Bugs are cool, be kind to them. Please fight to keep them (and all of the planet’s species at risk) around for future generations.
I’m just going to say it, this is perhaps the single most important book that has ever been written in our relatively short history, and it is my belief that there isn’t a single drop of hyperbole in this statement. Starting with a very bleak reality of a world with little to no insects remaining, those four pages of a realistic future that we are hurtling towards, the book doesn’t let up on the bleakness, yet through it there is an intense fascination and enjoyment in learning throughout. Filled with facts and real world examples, for a relatively short book page count wise in delves deep into the issues surrounding our insect world and its peril, yet also delves into wider ideas such as how and why some societies have lost confidence in science, and how scientists have had to respond to that. There are success stories, yes, but it gives us a roadmap to where we are heading yet also, if your mind is open enough, the road map is also there to maybe, maybe just tip the scales a little bit to give insects a slim chance, in turn giving us a slim chance to turn the tide on our tidal wave toward our extinction.
The phrase “Save the Bees!” is so much more than a cute hip slogan - it’s a necessity for our lives.
This book is sad. From creepy-crawlies to charismatic butterflies, whether you care about insects or not, you’ll care about the effects of their slow disappearance on our everyday lives.
Great book that makes you really see how much of our lives and world depends on the tiny scurrying creatures that most of us humans abhor.
It did kind of freak me out, and we are absolutely doomed. In so many ways. Yes, there are efforts to save some pollinators (bees and butterflies, not flies so much), but climate change and our need to tame and dominate nature are really the major issues that seem impossible to surmount.
Such an appealing premise and topic, I knew I had to get my hands on it the moment I saw it at the bookstore. But as I'm trying to cut down on book buying, I borrowed a copy from the DC public library and I think I'm the first to crack it open.
My initial excitement for this book was quickly replaced with disappointment. I agree with many of the other criticisms I've seen. While it does an excellent job in raising awareness to a gradually important issue of ecosystem collapse (that affects just about everything humans rely on) with Milman's eye-opening anecdotes and thorough research (evident by the bibliography that takes up 15% of the book), it was overall uncompelling. I find the issue is that the book lacks the gripping structure to drive the narrative of how insect population decline is a serious indicator of catastrophe; in other words, it tells more than it shows.
Understandably, ecosystem collapse is an overwhelmingly complex subject to try to string together, especially at the scale that insects contribute. The intricate web that connects human actions to the pollinators to the food we eat is difficult to comprehend for those who don't spend their lives weaving through them. Yet, The Insect Crisis is arguably among the best attempts I've seen so far at making the subject accessible to a wider audience.
One thing that sets it apart from other climate-related non-fiction is a somewhat optimistic call for "inaction", endorsing conservation approach to let nature heal. We have seen some benefits of this to animal populations during the pandemic period of inactivity, and it could very well work for insects.
Regardless, the book has reminded me to be kinder to insects, even in urban settings* and to appreciate many of the movements that urge more organic farming, reduce pesticide use. I will be visiting Bavaria in May and looking forward to learning more about the impacts of such movements.
*Except mosquitos. I do not care if other insects and animals like to eat mosquitoes - you will just need to find something else to snack on. I will never forgive mosquitoes for giving me the experience of dengue.
5 stars. Oliver Milman’s ‘The Insect Crisis’ is an enlightening and sobering book chronicling the distressing trajectory of dwindling insect populations worldwide, woven w harrowing evidence and detailing the unravelling of the essential ecosystems that sustain all life on our planet.
This book drew me in frm the prologue, where it presented a stark and unnerving prediction of a world stripped of its insect inhabitants. The subsequent chapters maintained this unnerving tone, offering a comprehensive analysis of the multifaceted causes contributing to the catastrophic decline of insects worldwide. Milman explored the devastation across various landscapes, frm the once-thriving countryside of England, now devoid of insect life, to the monumental fields of US agriculture, where the plight of bees has become distressingly apparent.
However, ‘The Insect Crisis’ is also a celebration of the diversity and significance of insects. Milman showcases the pivotal roles these creatures play in the intricate web of life, emphasising that even the most reviled insects serve indispensable ecological functions. The book strikes a delicate balance between presenting the urgency of the crisis and fostering a newfound appreciation fr the incredible variety of insects.
In saying that though, Milman not only highlights the impending ecological peril awaiting us but also underscores the ramifications fr human society. It illuminates the interconnectedness between insect decline and the stability of our food systems, the availability of medicinal resources, the vitality of the natural world that inspires and enriches us, etc etc. Again, w/out insects, we’re well and truly fucked. As he points out, “As insects make up around three-quarters of described living things, this would mean that nearly 14 percent of all animal and plant species face extinction which equates to more than the million species the IPBES report settles on.”
Likewise, fr instance, Milman explains that agriculture is pretty reliant on pollinators, like bees, butterflies, and other insects, to sustain crop production, and this reliance is steadily increasing in developing countries. Yet this has come at precisely the wrong time, as global insect populations are continuing to decline significantly. The dilemma in this lies in the rising demands on agriculture, primarily driven by an expanding human population, increased meat and soy consumption, expansion of agricultural land, and the impact of the climate crisis, etc etc, which all directly threatens pollinators and their habitats.
So, as insect populations decline, the risk of reaching a critical point in crop yield failure becomes more pronounced. If this trend continues w/out addressing the declining pollinator populations, agriculture, as well as all of society, faces a terrible crisis. To quote Milman again, he reveals how “one study found that pollinator losses could cause so many preventable conditions, such as heart disease, that the world may face an extra 1.4 million deaths a year. It turns out that losing wild bees and other pollinators is disastrous for our health.” But, as Milman also points out, timely action is crucial to avert this imminent threat to global food security and agricultural sustainability, such as preserving and restoring pollinator habitats, reducing pesticide use, and implementing sustainable agricultural practices to ensure sufficient and consistent pollination fr crop production, among other things.
Ultimately, Milman’s work transcends the scope of a warning; it is a resounding call to action. By laying bare the fragility of our ecosystems, he compels us all to recognise the urgency of preserving and restoring insect populations. This book stands as an essential testament to the imperiled state of these so-called “miniature empires” and the urgent need fr collective action to avert a looming catastrophe, or, as Milman and others in the field call it, “Insectaggedon.”
I was well aware of the insect crisis we are dealing with based on other books, and National Geographic’s good research This book was extremely thorough with regard to covering the research behind the extinctions we are seeing Most importantly, it brings up the likely fact that technology is not going to save us from this problem
As we lose the good insects that are beneficial and remain mostly hidden from us in our yards and wild spaces, we will gain more of the “bad” insects that invade our home
I think this is very important for the general population, who may not have read a lot about the current research, to understand that most of the free services provided by the insects we are losing area are not familiar to the average person who may not be familiar with current research to understand that the services, which insects provide for free
Not understanding or protecting these insects will cost us money, if businesses or the government have to pick up the slack, so this is directly related to our pocketbooks, and, potentially taxes
The biggest take away from this book are the 3 things we should all keep in mind, 1, reduce pesticides in our yard, 2, plant trees, which is so beneficial to insects as well as the birds that eat them 3, don’t purchase mosquito services
I have been told by a pest control expert.- off the record, and with the request not to share this information - that there is no way to selectively kill only mosquitoes, it kills everything.
However, I was asked not to share it because these companies make so much money off of the service Please keep this in mind as these services are killing everything in our yard, and affecting birds, ability to breed
I hope people will , overtime, help the insects, and, thus, ourselves This is far more about tiny beneficial insects that are outside of most people’s knowledge than it is about non-native honeybees.
I give this book a superior rating and recommend it for everyone to help understand what we can do to make a difference in our world and the world, we leave the next generation
An erudite, yet surprisingly accessible text. This book showcases the trauma that the human age of innovation has inflicted on the world around us, specifically the insects that we tend to shun, but don't realise are essential to the survival of so much of our lifestyle (mass pollination and artistic value to name but two).
It was interesting, and somewhat frightening, to read about the future of insects around us. I leave the book perhaps barely more intrigued by cockraches than before. (1. Since I was zero intrigued before this wasn't particularly hard 2. Apparently there are many more types than the household pest variety we all despise)
Insects are rather important creatures apparently, and I have a more heady appreciation for them now.
This book is gripping and easy to read even for those who know very little about insects and entomology, such as myself. Not only did I find this small volume pleasantly educational, but it also made me aware of a crisis that I knew very little about, and that affects all our lives more than we know. I think everyone knows that bees are endangered, but this book raises awareness about the dangers faced by other, less iconic insects, that are nonetheless crucial for our ecosystem. Reading this made me more aware and appreciative of the insects around me, while also making me realise that there are certain types of insects that I haven’t seen since I was a kid. More than anything, this volume made me want to know more — which is the best review I can give any non-fiction book.
The bugs are dying! It's not so easy to notice in California where we never had so many bugs, but in other more historically bug-filled areas, it is more obvious. Almost everyone knows about the problems with bees, but I confess that I had not been aware of the extent of the problem for insects in general. We need them. Most of them are not pests. They serve many essential purposes. We have to find ways to reverse the decline. The biggest culprit here is climate change, and we already know that we have to address that one, but there are other causes too - pesticides and habitat destruction are the obvious ones. We have to save the ugly and disgusting creatures as well as the cute ones. Ecosystems can't survive based on cute creatures alone.
- mass pesticide use is killing insects on enormous scales - neonicotinoids are ruining our soils, bugs and anything that eats them - people need to stop being scared of bugs, and stop killing them, but encourage them into our gardens - no insects = no food supply for insectivores e.g. birds - no food supply = mass loss of biodiversity - no insects = no pollination - no pollination = no fucking food
All in all, no insects = downfall of earth. Stop fucking killing bugs for god's sake
This book was illuminating and measured in its careful argument of what is causing the rapid loss of insect life. I didn’t love Milman’s narration of the audiobook, but I appreciated the mix of science and story.
It’s a very bleak picture, and the feeling of not being able to do something to meaningfully respond to the loss is a little overwhelming. I could only read the book in small stretches.
The bee chapter was my favorite. Honeybees don’t need our help! But wild bees do.
This book covers a lot of very interesting and important subjects (it definitely isn’t about a single “insect crisis” - author does a good job in communicating how complex the different challenges facing different insects are). But it manages to be less than the sum of its parts: I think because it feels a bit frantic and the urgency of the authors message confuses what he is diagnosing by way of a solution.
Overall you’re left concluding: (a) insects are important and understudied because they’re not visible (probably true); and (b) biodiversity loss has lots of causes from the macro (climate change) to the micro (interdependent ecosystems being eroded). But there isn’t much of a sense of what we should do about this. It might just be because we’re past the point of no return, but the “so what” felt missing.
Thank you NetGalley for the advance audiobook copy in exchange for an honest review! A very well researched book that made me realize there are issues regarding insects beyond the honeybees. The book is rather disheartening to listen to/read since it packs a lot of sad data in a short length regarding the impending crisis. The statistics feel too much after a while, so it might be better to listen to in smaller bits. The narrator has a great voice to convey all this information. Overall it made for an interesting listen.
There is a lot of interesting information in this book. However, the book quickly turns into the author repeating the same point over and over again with not much new added. We understand that insects are in decline and this is bad for us but what would you suggest we do to fix this issue? The later chapters get more interesting with the author focusing on small subsets and diving into real-world examples. I wish we had gotten more of this and less of the author repeating the same point in a thousand different ways.
Oliver Milman’s “The Insect Crisis” begins with a narrative of a doomsday scenario depicting an insect-deficient earth ravaged by ecological crises. It’s an apocalyptic tale that helps us paint a picture of what’s to come as we traverse a sixth mass extinction event brought about by the past 200 years of human influence and destruction. The book ends with humanity’s futile attempts to address the predicament with technological advancements that led us to the crisis in the first place. There is nothing hopeful in this book. It highlighted how arrogant and misguided humans are as we traverse the surface of the earth trying to bend “God’s creations” to our will. Our actions to further our own progress and development as a species has led to the demise and exploitation of others. The irony? - our attempts at advancing humanity are smeared with blood, genocide, and inequity among our own. Our current actions are equivalent to a parasite sucking the life force of earth. We can strive to change this narrative by embracing our ability to be selfless caretakers, empathizers, and lovers.
Aside from all the despair and dread this book inflicts upon your soul, there is much to find fascinating and jaw-dropping among its pages. Insects are alien-like in appearance and their qualities make them uniquely adaptable to changing environments. Insects are essential in thriving ecosystems and the soil food web as a whole. This book highlights many different species of insects and their role in the environment. It also highlights how many are threatened by extinction in the face of pesticide use, the climate emergency, and human transformation of land for big-agribusinesses. I loved how this book addressed many misconceptions regarding what can be done to help tackle some of the issues facing specific species. For example, Milman did an excellent job in addressing the misguided obsession with honey-beekeeping and how it has led to the demise of wild bees. Also, the planting of milkweed for Monarch butterflies is a misstep that doesn’t address the major players of their population decline. Milman provides several solutions that highlight the necessity in giving nature autonomy.
Milman tackles the issues of agribusiness and their influence on current agricultural practices that destroy ecosystems and exacerbate the climate crisis. According to the research highlighted within this book, we have terraformed the earth, as more than 96% of the world’s mammals are currently composed of us, our cattle, and our pigs. The book also mentions how a “third of all viable crop land is used to produce feed for livestock, which themselves take up a quarter of the planet’s ice-free habitat,” highlighting our need to reflect upon how our diets impact the environment. A lack of action will lead to uninhabitable land for us, plants, insects, and all forms of life.
This book does an excellent job addressing the multifaceted predicament of the climate emergency by addressing misinformation spewed by climate change deniers. It further examines:
•how increased CO2 is actually a detriment to the nutritional composition of plants •how agribusinesses have a profound influence over farmers and their agricultural practices •the negative impacts and crisis associated with pre-treated seeds and pesticide use •how our culture has developed a lack of appreciation for insects and the environment as a whole •the impacts of deforestation and how the economy drives its implementation to the detriment of all •how light pollution has become a major problem for natural events to take place •the key factors leading to colony collapse disorder in bee colonies
The naturalist, Aldo Leopold, describes humanity perfectly with this quote in the book, “suffice to crack the atom, to command the tides. But they do not suffice for the oldest task in human history, to live on a piece of land without spoiling it.”
This book is packed with so much useful information, while creating a greater appreciation for the most diverse group of living creatures.