Growing up in the suburbs we raked all the leaves and packed them in plastic bags which were then picked up as trash (no recycling back then). We had hundreds of fireflies everywhere.
Today I’m on 3.5 acres, half of which I don’t mow at all and the other half I don’t rake the leaves. But there are still fewer fireflies than 40 years ago.
Same here. Used to get whole families of deer, rabbits, hedgehogs, squirrels etc eating our gardens goodies. Nowadays its lucky to catch a single magpie nibbling on an apple. Animals today are so damn picky. /s
When I was a child in the 70s we’d visit my great-grandparents in Indianapolis and the lightning bugs were like that. Image, a heavily polluted, major metro area had more lightning bugs than anywhere I’ve seen since.
I did this last year and saw twice as many fireflies.
Which means I saw six total all summer.
The suburbs suck.
Yeah this is drinking straws vs private jets.
Growing up in the suburbs we raked all the leaves and packed them in plastic bags which were then picked up as trash (no recycling back then). We had hundreds of fireflies everywhere.
Today I’m on 3.5 acres, half of which I don’t mow at all and the other half I don’t rake the leaves. But there are still fewer fireflies than 40 years ago.
There are fewer everything. I’ve commented on the ecosystem collapse many time, don’t have the energy any longer.
At least my yard is coming back. Our house is the reason the block has frogs, dragonflies, etc.
Same here. Used to get whole families of deer, rabbits, hedgehogs, squirrels etc eating our gardens goodies. Nowadays its lucky to catch a single magpie nibbling on an apple. Animals today are so damn picky. /s
The decline in insect populations is so bad even Jeremy Clarkson is trying to fight it.
That’s how you know it’s really bad.
Isn’t he a farmer now or something?
It’s all the pesticides we use in gardens and agriculture. It’s in our air water everywhere decimating all kinds of insects.
A doubling is still a big deal, though. You made a difference! Imagine if that were to keep up throughout the neighborhood.
It’s a far cry from when I lived in the woods and could walk around on a dark night just from the light of fireflies.
When I was a child in the 70s we’d visit my great-grandparents in Indianapolis and the lightning bugs were like that. Image, a heavily polluted, major metro area had more lightning bugs than anywhere I’ve seen since.
I’m living in the same place I grew up and when I was a kid we could catch a couple dozen a night, enough to fill a jar and read by.
I had a sergeant who sneaked up on some troopies based on the light from the unshielded radium pips on someone’s wristwatch.
(Why yes. He was 22me regiment; why do you ask?)
But, point is, you didn’t take a flashlight because the light was enough, and your eyes adjusted and made it enough, because it was enough.
Anyway, 10 years of doubling is 1000x. 6ooo fireflies would be cool.
If I’m still in the suburbs in a decade I’ll kill myself.
I’m fucking back off to the boonies at the first opportunity
That could very well just be early stages. Very few fireflies means not many to reproduce
conversely, I saw tons last year in the suburbs!
this year was wasps, though