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Home Guy[_4_] September 22nd 19 01:38 PM

North America's Bird Population Is Collapsing - Nearly 3 Billion WipedOut Since 1970
 
Here's a happy story for your sunday morning.

I'm sure the MSM, CO2 climate changers, BLM, SJW's, Feminists, NPC
Wojaks and Antifa will get right on this any day now, right after they
cut down the next woodlot to build a solar farm or wind turbine...

======================

North America's Bird Population Is Collapsing - Nearly 3 Billion Wiped
Out Since 1970

Sat, 09/21/2019 - 22:45

Authored by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog

All around us, our world is literally in a state of collapse, but most
people don't seem to care. I spend much of my time writing about the
inevitable collapse of our economic and financial systems, but they are
only one part of the story.

These days, millions upon millions of us are spending countless hours in
this "virtual world" that we have created, and that is preventing many
of us from understanding what is really going on in "the real world".
Where I live, I can literally keep the doors wide open for hours without
worrying about bugs coming in, because insect populations are
disappearing at a pace that is frightening. They are calling it "the
insect apocalypse", and some scientists are warning that they could all
be gone in 100 years. And this dramatic decline in the insect
population is one of the main reasons why North America's bird
population is collapsing. In the old days, I remember the singing of
birds often greeting me in the morning, but these days I am never
awakened by birds. That might make sense if I lived right in the middle
of a major city, but I don't. I live in a very rural location, and I do
see birds out here, but not nearly as many as I would expect.

Sadly, the scientific evidence is confirming what many of us had
feared. According to a scientific study that was just released, North
America's bird population has fallen by "nearly 3 billion birds since
1970.

If you've noticed fewer birds in your backyard than you used to,
you're not mistaken.

North America has lost nearly 3 billion birds since 1970, a study
said Thursday, which also found significant population declines among
hundreds of bird species, including those once considered plentiful.

On second thought, I don't know if the term "collapse" is strong enough
to describe what we are facing.

In 1970, there were about 10 billion birds in North America.

Now, there are about 7 billion.

When are we finally going to admit that we have a major crisis on our
hands?

Hopefully it will be before the count gets to zero.

Overall, we are talking about a total decline of approximately 30
percent

"We saw this tremendous net loss across the entire bird community,"
says Ken Rosenberg, an applied conservation scientist at the Cornell Lab
of Ornithology in Ithaca, N.Y. "By our estimates, it's a 30% loss in the
total number of breeding birds."

Could humanity survive without birds?

Probably, but this is yet another sign that the planetary food chain is
in the process of totally breaking down. Despite all of our advanced
technology, we are not going to survive without an environment that
supports life, and at this moment that environment is being destroyed at
a staggering pace.

According to the lead author of the study, the evidence they compiled
"showed pervasive losses among common birds across all habitats,
including backyard birds"

"Multiple, independent lines of evidence show a massive reduction in
the abundance of birds," said study lead author Ken Rosenberg, a senior
scientist at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and American Bird
Conservancy, in a statement. "We expected to see continuing declines of
threatened species. But for the first time, the results also showed
pervasive losses among common birds across all habitats, including
backyard birds."

I like having birds in my backyard. In fact, I wish that I had a whole
lot more.

Two of the largest factors being blamed for this stunning decline are
"toxic pesticides" and "insect decline". We have already talked about
the "insect apocalypse" which is raging all around us, but I should say
a few words about pesticides. Yes, they may help to protect our crops
and our lawns, but in the process we are literally poisoning everything.

And that includes ourselves. According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, "there are traces of 29 different pesticides in
the average American's body", and many believe that this is one of the
reasons why cancer rates have skyrocketed in recent decades.

These days it seems like just about everyone knows at least one person
with cancer. If you are one of those rare people that doesn't know a
single person with cancer, please leave a comment below, because I would
love to hear your story. It has been estimated that one out of every
three women and one out of every two men will get cancer in their
lifetimes, but considering the rate that we are currently polluting our
environment those estimates may be too conservative.

Without a doubt, several of the big pesticide companies are some of the
most evil corporations on the entire planet, and yet most Americans
don't really seem to care about the death and destruction that they have
unleashed all around us.

As with so many other things, this is yet another example that shows
that we have no future on the path that we are currently on, and the
clock is ticking.

Don't you want a world in which the birds sing to you in the morning?
Pete Marra, one of the scientists involved in the study, told the press
that a number of bird species "that were very common when I was a kid"
are among those being hit the hardest.

"We can all talk through the stories about there being fewer and
fewer birds, but it's not until you really put the numbers on it that
you can really grasp the magnitude of these results," Marra said. "We're
now seeing common species that have declined, things like red-winged
blackbirds and grackles and meadowlarks - species that I grew up with,
that were very common when I was a kid. That is the most surprising and
most disturbing part."

Everywhere around us, we can see decay, decline or collapse. This
stunning drop in the bird population is just one more example.

But just like with so many other issues, most people don't really care,
and most people certainly don't want to change.

So in the end we will reap what we have sown, and it will not be
pleasant.

https://www.zerohedge.com/health/nor...wiped-out-1970

Cindy Hamilton[_2_] September 22nd 19 02:03 PM

North America's Bird Population Is Collapsing - Nearly 3 BillionWiped Out Since 1970
 
On Sunday, September 22, 2019 at 8:37:37 AM UTC-4, Home Guy wrote:
Here's a happy story for your sunday morning.

I'm sure the MSM, CO2 climate changers, BLM, SJW's, Feminists, NPC
Wojaks and Antifa will get right on this any day now, right after they
cut down the next woodlot to build a solar farm or wind turbine...


Too many people. I'm kind of heartened by the fact that so many
youngsters want to live in cities. Let 'em live in the hives and
we can stop bulldozing stuff and naming the subdivision after the
things that aren't there anymore.

Not, of course, that I want to live in a city. I'm quite happy in
my vintage 1947 house. No trees were harmed... At least not
recently. It's built on old farmland anyway, so the damage was
done in the 19th Century.

Cindy Hamilton


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