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Where Are We Watching? Global Insect Monitoring Coverage

181 long-term insect monitoring studies exist worldwide — but nearly half are in Europe alone, and Australia’s entire region accounts for just 8. Hover bars for exact counts.

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Which Insects Are Being Monitored — And Which Are Ignored?

Freshwater insects dominate the monitoring record. Bees — among our most critical pollinators — are among the least studied of any insect group. Click legend to toggle Terrestrial / Freshwater.

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The Vanishing: Flying Insect Biomass Collapsed Across All Habitats

Malaise traps across 63 sites in Germany recorded flying insect biomass from 1989 to 2016. The decline cuts across urban, agricultural, and protected nature reserve sites alike. Hover for values. Click legend to isolate habitats.

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Farmland Predicts Insect Loss: More Arable Land, Less Biomass

Each point is one trap-year observation. Colour shows average temperature, dot size shows grassland cover. Sites surrounded by farmland consistently show lower insect biomass. Hover points for site and year details.

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Closer to Home: Native Bee Sightings Across Australian States Since 2000

Citizen science records from the Atlas of Living Australia show native bee (Apidae) observations by state. Rising counts partly reflect growing participation — the real concern is how little long-term baseline data exists. Hover lines for counts. Click legend to isolate states.

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