Surprising New Research Links Infant Mortality to Crashing Bat Populations | Without bats to eat insects, farmers turned to more pesticides, a study found. That appears to have increased infant deaths
Surprising New Research Links Infant Mortality to Crashing Bat Populations | Without bats to eat insects, farmers turned to more pesticides, a study found. That appears to have increased infant deaths
Without bats to eat insects, farmers turned to more pesticides, a study found. That appears to have increased infant deaths.
The solution is obvious: more bats
2 0 ReplyAnd it's being subsidized by the government.
1 0 ReplyFewer bats, more pesticides, fewer bug encrusted vehicle windshields, and more dead babies.
It’s all connected 😞.
6 0 ReplyYou beat me to it.
It's all connected and humans are speed running around disconnecting things.
4 0 ReplyIs this a bad time for dead baby jokes I can’t remember any
1 0 Reply
You mean to tell me all these chemicals we're pumping into the environment are bad for us? 😔
11 0 ReplyI like bats for the same reason I like spiders. They themselves largely keep to themselves and leave you alone while eating things that don't.
21 0 ReplyI like bats because they're little cuties.
One of the local universities here has a bat fest every year. I always go to see the cute bats.
18 1 ReplyQuick, FlyingSquid. To the Bat-festival!
7 1 Reply
We have a couple of orb weavers in our small backyard and we've been getting a ton of beautiful webs everyday and a bonus. No bugs
7 0 Reply
The Batterfly Effect
11 0 ReplyNow that's a Freakonomics episode.
17 0 ReplyIt's always bats
1 0 Reply
It's always bats
6 0 ReplyOr, in this case, not being batty enough.
7 0 Reply
did a bat write this?
3 1 ReplyNaNoBatWriMo isn't until November.
1 0 Reply