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.
I 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.
36ReplyI 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.
31ReplyQuick, FlyingSquid. To the Bat-festival!
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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
9Reply
Now that's a Freakonomics episode.
25ReplyI was really expecting this to be about causality but wow... Talk about causality
1ReplyIt's always bats
1Reply
You mean to tell me all these chemicals we're pumping into the environment are bad for us? 😔
21ReplyFewer bats, more pesticides, fewer bug encrusted vehicle windshields, and more dead babies.
It’s all connected 😞.
20ReplyYou beat me to it.
It's all connected and humans are speed running around disconnecting things.
12ReplyIs this a bad time for dead baby jokes I can’t remember any
3Reply
The Batterfly Effect
13ReplyIt's always bats
6ReplyOr, in this case, not being batty enough.
7Reply
The solution is obvious: more bats
4Replydid a bat write this?
2ReplyNaNoBatWriMo isn't until November.
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And it's being subsidized by the government.
1Reply