this post was submitted on 01 May 2025
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UK Nature and Environment

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The long-term decline in the number of flying insects being splattered on cars after a journey is well recognised by older drivers. But the latest survey has revealed that the number of insects found on vehicle number plates has plummeted by 63% since 2021.

An analysis of records from more than 25,000 journeys across Britain since 2021 reveals an alarming apparent drop in flying insect abundance, although the rate of decrease slowed in 2024.

Bug splats on the numberplates of citizen scientists using the Bugs Matter app for the Kent Wildlife Trust and Buglife survey declined 8% from 2023 to 2024, after sharper drops of 44% in 2023 and 28% in 2022.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 day ago

I noticed last year in-particular there was a very sharp drop-off. Normally a variety of flying insects invade my personal space in the evenings - it was always a tough call... a room too hot to sleep in, or a room full of hornets; you'd be surprised how often the hornets won.

There was even a time not so long ago where we used to get "waves" of certain flying insects each year, presumably one species won the Insect Sex Games each year, and were crowned champions with wave after wave of children.. ladybirds, daddy longlegs, etc. Thousands everywhere! I think the last one of these was a long time ago now, perhaps nearly a decade.

Presumably this is devastating for bird and bat populations.. hopefully they don't start invading my personal space in response.