• Ghosthacked@lemm.ee
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    23 days ago

    Shame. The US is a beautiful country and psycho cult rednecks have let deregulation ruin such beautiful wilderness.

  • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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    23 days ago

    Probably the same reason we had 40+ tornadoes, huge hailstorms, floods, and drought-enabled wildfires in six adjacent states within 48 hours. Anthropogenic climate change is real, whether you believe in it or not.

    • Doctor_Satan@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      Anthropogenic climate change is real, whether you believe in it or not.

      You know who believes in climate change? Fossil fuel companies, insurance companies, the military industrial complex, and every single politician talking about buying or taking Greenland by force. All the very same people who have spent the past half century publicly denying the existence of anthropogenic climate change. Not only do they believe in it, but they are designing their profit models around it at our expense.

    • arakhis_@feddit.org
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      22 days ago

      my mother just told me as to we shouldn’t take climate change that serious and look into the 5-10 biggest sectors that affect it: “we just dont know what happens tomorrow, my child”

      AHHAHAAHAHAHAH I have no hope, this person wasnt even unreasonable before. 2025 is so fucked, with a definite

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        23 days ago

        Well, one would expect mountainous areas to flood because elevation focuses water flow. I’m in Florida, flattest state in the union. We never flood except in hurricanes, and those floods don’t last like they do in other places, in and out.

          • Yeather@lemmy.ca
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            22 days ago

            Hurricanes are known to travel in land and up North though. The fact a hurricane hit Tennessee isn’t odd. It was the strength and the length it lingered over the state that made it devastating.

    • bigcow@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      I agree it does mention hundreds of millions but is confusing because…Shook said. “If we lose 80% of our bees every year,…” Not very clear in the article on exactly what percentage of the bee population died.

  • rudyharrelson@lemmy.radio
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    23 days ago

    I definitely don’t want to downplay a crisis, but I feel like I’ve been seeing headlines saying “all the bees are dying and we don’t know why” every year for nearly 20 years now.

    I’m no bee expert. Just seems to me, based on the headlines, bees would’ve been extinct 10 years ago.

    Some cursory searching led me to Colony Collapse Disorder which, apparently, has no agreed-upon cause. Apparently devastating losses to honey bee colonies started being reported around 1900. But it also mentions:

    In 2024, the United States Census of Agriculture reported an all-time high in commercial honey bee hives (mostly in Texas), making them the fastest-growing livestock segment in the country.[38]

    Link to the source cited there: https://archive.is/nfeb2

    Apparently last year saw the largest honey bee populations in US history. Though apparently that huge boom in honey bee population is a threat to other native pollinators, so I guess that presents its own unique problems.

    • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Usually, when people talk about bees dying, they mean wild bees. Unlike honey bees they aren’t cultivated by us. They also tend to be better pollinators than honey bees, adapted to local plants that honey bees can’t handle well.

    • safesyrup@feddit.org
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      23 days ago

      The issue is OP is spreading misinformation. You‘re right, we haven‘t lost 80% of the bee population, because this was a hypothetical statement in the article saying it would have consequences if it happened.

  • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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    23 days ago

    Most domesticated bee species aren’t native to the US. It’s quite possible they are just getting bee-ported.

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    23 days ago

    We’re pretty sure it’s the Monsanto pesticide and anyone who suggests it is hit with a litigation threat. Curiously, as we’re speed-breeding domesticated bees the wild bees are dying out faster, so as the bee population dwindles it also becomes more domesticated and less wild. I know that’s a bad thing, but I am fuzzy on the why details.

    I’m a brown thumb, and plants wilt as my shadow falls on them, but if you’re a green-thumb, plant pollinators, which will help the bees.

    Also plant milkweed for the monarchs.

    • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      I’ll hop in here and add that your locality probably does pesticide fogging/spraying. For what it is worth, you can ask them not you spray your property. Make some local wildflower patches in your yard. Less stuff you have to mow, more food and habitat for native birds and insects. It’s a win-win.

    • Kalysta@lemm.ee
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      22 days ago

      It’s Bayer’s now. Monsanto sold it to Bayer when they started getting heat for neonicotinoids killing all the bees.

    • mlg@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Some beekeepers actually mentioned that they’ve been scraping the beeswax clean off their hives more frequently because its known that the beeswax collects pesticides and herbicides over time which affects the colony due to exposure.

      The problem is its not just monsanto acid, there’s a ton of other issues also correlated like weather/climate, seasonal flowering, untreated parasites, bacteria, etc.

      We’ve literally nuked the environment so hard that even if we fix one problem, the population will not make a full bounce back (although I would think monsanto is the biggest threat)

      Biggest scam of this century was corporate produce monoliths convincing people Organic was about health and not the fact that it doesn’t use a scorched earth policy and scam one off hybrid plant seeds to grow food which has been setting us up for a widespread fammine for decades.

      Some random superweed is gonna crossbreed with some rapid out of control growth plant and wipe out half of the food chain.

    • MintyAnt@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      Plant native. Plants that are native to your ecosystem. Those are the true pollinator powerhouse plants that bees need to survive

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        23 days ago

        I forget the term for non native, non invasive plants (naturalized?) but those are good too. Native is best, of course. I see a ton of carpenter bees (native bees to my area) on my red clover (non native, non invasive).

        • MintyAnt@lemmy.world
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          23 days ago

          Unfortunately, naturalized plants are not good. It’s a scale, with invasive plants being extremely bad. Naturalized plants aren’t as bad. But still bad

          In the end, our native insects rely on native plants (with extremely few exceptions to not be distracted by). A native plant can support hundreds or even thousands of species.

          A non native / naturalized plants cannot support even a fraction of that. They can also support… Non native insects. Which in turn fuck up the ecosystem, either by displacement or direct damage.

          I’m not gonna tell you to rip out naturalized plants like clover. I’m not gonna say you should destroy your garden. You should just know that native plants are superior in literally every possible way, and your NEXT plant choices should be as native as you can get :)

          • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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            22 days ago

            If you can suggest native ground cover that is low maintenance and easy to start I’d consider it. I’m not going to put plugs in my yard when I can just over seed with clover. Clover is strictly better than turf grass.

            • MintyAnt@lemmy.world
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              22 days ago

              It is better than turf, but I’m not talking about grass lawns, I’m talking about plants like for a garden. It’s better to have more garden plant masses, less grass lawn.

              Most people don’t need as much lawn as they have and reducing down to more what you actually use is great, but it’s totally situational.

              If you wanted a NorthEast suggestion for general ground cover I’d say wild strawberry. But if it’s like … Lawn then just stick with what you’re doing.

    • spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      23 days ago

      Also, the domesticated bees are generally honeybees. And unfortunately, honeybee and wild bees don’t fulfill the same rile, so even if we replaced wild bees with honeybees 1:1, we still wouldn’t be able to polinate everything.