Insects are disappearing more and more. That's why we have to worry

Have you noticed that you are removing fewer butterflies from glass recently? You're not alone. Drivers throughout Great Britain have reported a shortage of flies, mosquitoes, ruins and other insects in their cars - causing fear of scientists that such insects may be in [...]
Have you noticed that you are removing fewer butterflies from glass recently?
You're not alone. Drivers throughout Great Britain have reported a shortage of flies, mosquitoes, ruins and other insects in their cars - causing fear of scientists that such insects may be on the decline.

And this new phenomenon has been noticed by experts who say there's a decline in insect numbers over the past few decades, broadcast Indesksonline.
“Where all insects have gone” Asked Michael Groom of Teffont Evias in Wiltshire in a writing in Telegraph. “Preview on my car screen remains clear, regardless of speed”, he added.
According to data collected by the Entomological Society “Krefeld”, an amateur group of self-imitologists who monitored more than 100 natural reserves in Western Europe since eighty years say that insect levels have dropped significantly in recent years.
By 2013 this group had found that since 1989 the number of insects had dropped by almost 80 percent, Science Mag reported.
But why should we worry?
According to Dave Goulson, an ecologist at the University of Sussex, who works with the Entomological Society Craigfeld, says that if insects disappear then other species are also at risk.
If a bird's insects feeding on them disappear, then that means 4/5 of people's food will disappear in the last century, and this is shocking”, he had previously said in a magazine.
Experts are blaming the rise in pesticide use over the past 50 years.
Since 2006, green colonies have fallen by about one third because of chemicals, as well as the loss of flower - rich meadows.