Though it may be hard to believe for anyone contending with mosquitos, locusts, yellow jackets, carpenter bees, horse flies, fleas, or chiggers -- just for examples --but there is an insect shortage, I've read, and it's serious. The problem is, despite all the plagues and miseries some perpetuate, insects provide a the crucial service of pollination for human food crops as well as all kinds of ecological good like feeding other animal populations like birds, fish, amphibians, and reptiles.
When I brought my recycling cart up from the curb this afternoon, I was met by a large bumblebee that hung over me and the cart. It left and came back, and I eventually just backed away, to park the cart more neatly later. I think the bee had the message that others may be gone, but he or she was definitely here for the summer.
I've been missing my Northern Mockingbirds as well. They used to be all over central North Carolina like robins and Canada geese, but I haven't seen one for about a year now. I think I spot them, and it turns out to be something else.
When I brought my recycling cart up from the curb this afternoon, I was met by a large bumblebee that hung over me and the cart. It left and came back, and I eventually just backed away, to park the cart more neatly later. I think the bee had the message that others may be gone, but he or she was definitely here for the summer.
I've been missing my Northern Mockingbirds as well. They used to be all over central North Carolina like robins and Canada geese, but I haven't seen one for about a year now. I think I spot them, and it turns out to be something else.