Insect Apocalypse In 2017, Plos One, sounded the alarm. The study showed that the biomass of flying insects - the combined weight of all individuals - decreased by 75% over 25 five years in about 60 nature reserves in Germany. A real "insect apocalypse", according to some experts, "writes the Swiss newspaper Le Temps. On September 7, the Swiss Academy of Natural Sciences issued a report confirming the seriousness of the situation. The authors of this work synthesized various sources of information, including the Red Book, as well as monitoring programs. other species, such as the Swiss Biodiversity Monitoring Assessment of the threat status of 6% of insect species The news was bad: the report confirms a sharp decline in insect diversity in Switzerland compared to the situation at the beginning of the 20th century Almost 60% of the 1,153 species listed in The Red Book, are currently under threat of extinction or potential threat. For example, more than 40% of wild bees in Switzerland are endangered, and 10% of them (about sixty species) have already disappeared, "the newspaper notes. "Of the 226 registered species of butterflies, 78 (35%) are endangered, and 44 (19%) are under potential threat. Among coleopteran insects (beetles, ladybugs, etc.) of the 256 assessed species, 118 (46%) are endangered and 47 (18%) are potentially endangered Insects in agricultural areas and in the aquatic environment are experiencing the greatest decline in numbers. But the population is harmful to the ecology of domestic bees, bred by people, has grown. As many as 13 new species of these winged parasites have appeared. The authors of the report point out that the mechanisms of insect extinction are well known. The disappearance of their habitats as a result of the intensification of agriculture, as well as the drainage of wetlands, is especially noted.