1 00:00:03,880 --> 00:00:06,590 Insects are disappearing 2 00:00:06,590 --> 00:00:08,203 across the world. 3 00:00:10,010 --> 00:00:11,150 If we lost our pollinators, 4 00:00:11,150 --> 00:00:14,210 we would lose 80 to 90% of the plants on the planet. 5 00:00:14,210 --> 00:00:15,523 That is not an option. 6 00:00:17,160 --> 00:00:18,820 It's the ecosystems on this planet 7 00:00:18,820 --> 00:00:20,293 that keep humans alive. 8 00:00:21,470 --> 00:00:22,850 Scientists warn us 9 00:00:22,850 --> 00:00:24,690 that the insect apocalypse 10 00:00:24,690 --> 00:00:27,360 is entirely possible. 11 00:00:27,360 --> 00:00:29,220 As we expand the human population, 12 00:00:29,220 --> 00:00:31,400 we keep making these sterile landscapes, 13 00:00:31,400 --> 00:00:32,893 and nature is pushed out. 14 00:00:34,070 --> 00:00:36,130 Without the ecological services 15 00:00:36,130 --> 00:00:37,593 that insects provide, 16 00:00:38,520 --> 00:00:39,737 we are doomed. 17 00:00:58,692 --> 00:01:01,275 (upbeat music) 18 00:01:02,530 --> 00:01:05,893 Insects are the most abundant animals on earth. 19 00:01:07,030 --> 00:01:09,480 It's estimated that the total weight 20 00:01:09,480 --> 00:01:11,500 of our insect population 21 00:01:11,500 --> 00:01:15,673 is at least 17 times greater than all of humanity. 22 00:01:16,740 --> 00:01:19,560 They provide the essential services necessary 23 00:01:19,560 --> 00:01:21,393 to support life. 24 00:01:23,490 --> 00:01:26,860 They pollinate about 80% of all plants, 25 00:01:26,860 --> 00:01:31,173 including about 75% of our food crops. 26 00:01:32,570 --> 00:01:35,540 They decompose dead plants and animals 27 00:01:35,540 --> 00:01:39,203 and thereby recycle nutrients back into the system. 28 00:01:40,090 --> 00:01:41,663 They manage the soil, 29 00:01:42,600 --> 00:01:44,740 and they are the essential food base 30 00:01:44,740 --> 00:01:48,883 for other animals, especially birds and freshwater fish. 31 00:01:51,410 --> 00:01:53,880 Annual ecosystem services provided 32 00:01:53,880 --> 00:01:56,250 by wild insects in the U.S, 33 00:01:56,250 --> 00:01:59,363 have been estimated at $57 billion. 34 00:02:02,730 --> 00:02:04,500 Scientists have identified 35 00:02:04,500 --> 00:02:08,803 and described about 66,000 animal and fish species. 36 00:02:10,240 --> 00:02:15,070 In contrast, insect species add up to about a million, 37 00:02:15,070 --> 00:02:17,920 and the number yet to be identified 38 00:02:17,920 --> 00:02:21,283 could amount to another 20 million or more. 39 00:02:23,240 --> 00:02:27,443 There are more than 160,000 kinds of moths in the world. 40 00:02:28,570 --> 00:02:33,383 Butterflies add up to about 17,500 species. 41 00:02:34,790 --> 00:02:37,570 There are nearly 20,000 types of bees 42 00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:42,293 and more than 12,000 kinds of ants. 43 00:02:44,280 --> 00:02:48,093 Beetle species total nearly 400,000. 44 00:02:50,330 --> 00:02:52,720 In light of those huge numbers, 45 00:02:52,720 --> 00:02:57,000 it's easy to believe that the insect abundance is endless, 46 00:02:57,000 --> 00:02:58,433 but is it? 47 00:02:59,906 --> 00:03:03,050 (upbeat music) 48 00:03:03,050 --> 00:03:07,200 As these trillions upon trillions of insects remain busy 49 00:03:07,200 --> 00:03:10,060 with the central ecological tasks, 50 00:03:10,060 --> 00:03:13,040 entomologists and concerned citizen scientists 51 00:03:13,040 --> 00:03:15,580 are noticing troubling trends 52 00:03:15,580 --> 00:03:19,003 in the woods, fields and back yards. 53 00:03:20,630 --> 00:03:23,710 Is it possible that the world's insect population 54 00:03:23,710 --> 00:03:25,443 is beginning to crash? 55 00:03:27,020 --> 00:03:30,720 Scientists knew there were serious ecological problems 56 00:03:30,720 --> 00:03:34,680 stemming from habitat loss, climate change, 57 00:03:34,680 --> 00:03:38,363 and the pervasive use of pesticides and herbicides. 58 00:03:39,350 --> 00:03:42,720 But there was little data to quantify the extent 59 00:03:42,720 --> 00:03:45,440 of the damage to insect populations 60 00:03:45,440 --> 00:03:48,770 and nothing to support a global alarm, 61 00:03:48,770 --> 00:03:51,220 until a long-term study 62 00:03:51,220 --> 00:03:53,983 by a German entomological club came to light. 63 00:03:59,032 --> 00:04:02,370 The Krefeld entomological society near Dusseldorf 64 00:04:02,370 --> 00:04:05,740 has collected and curated insect specimen records 65 00:04:05,740 --> 00:04:07,313 since 1864. 66 00:04:11,590 --> 00:04:14,730 Over the years, these citizen scientists maintain 67 00:04:14,730 --> 00:04:17,453 a rigidly consistent collection program, 68 00:04:19,310 --> 00:04:21,650 and they preserved the insects they caught 69 00:04:21,650 --> 00:04:23,440 using standardized nets 70 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:26,963 and meticulous identification and storage routines. 71 00:04:29,360 --> 00:04:31,790 In later years, they were noticing fewer 72 00:04:31,790 --> 00:04:34,810 and fewer insects filling their jars and boxes 73 00:04:34,810 --> 00:04:36,260 from their seasonal trips 74 00:04:36,260 --> 00:04:40,610 to 63 nature preserves representing virtually every type 75 00:04:40,610 --> 00:04:42,633 of natural habitat in the region. 76 00:04:45,330 --> 00:04:49,490 They employed a unique method of weighing their collection 77 00:04:49,490 --> 00:04:52,400 and shared the results with university scientists 78 00:04:52,400 --> 00:04:56,150 who confirmed a 76% seasonal decline 79 00:04:56,150 --> 00:04:58,560 over the previous 27 years, 80 00:04:58,560 --> 00:05:03,560 and the mid summer decline amounted to a shocking 82%. 81 00:05:03,640 --> 00:05:06,043 It was time to sound the alarm. 82 00:05:08,600 --> 00:05:11,730 Ecology professor and author, Dr. Dave Goulson 83 00:05:11,730 --> 00:05:14,943 of the university of Sussex explains the situation. 84 00:05:16,340 --> 00:05:18,130 There's one aspect of insect declines 85 00:05:18,130 --> 00:05:20,090 that people have noticed, 86 00:05:20,090 --> 00:05:22,850 particularly if they're of a certain age, 87 00:05:22,850 --> 00:05:25,830 {\an8}I guess maybe 50 or more years old. 88 00:05:25,830 --> 00:05:28,000 {\an8}I can remember when I was a kid, 89 00:05:28,000 --> 00:05:30,320 {\an8}that if we drove any distance in the summer, 90 00:05:30,320 --> 00:05:32,390 {\an8}we'd have to stop and clean the windscreen 91 00:05:32,390 --> 00:05:35,660 {\an8}of the car every hour or two, 92 00:05:35,660 --> 00:05:38,110 because it would be literally impossible to see through 93 00:05:38,110 --> 00:05:40,603 because it was covered in splattered insects, 94 00:05:42,430 --> 00:05:44,613 today that just doesn't happen. 95 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:48,470 In 2014, a panel 96 00:05:48,470 --> 00:05:52,350 of scientists synthesized current insect populations studies 97 00:05:52,350 --> 00:05:55,300 and found that most of the monitored species 98 00:05:55,300 --> 00:05:59,820 had declined on average by 45%. 99 00:05:59,820 --> 00:06:01,580 This disappearance of insects 100 00:06:01,580 --> 00:06:04,350 is something that people should take really seriously 101 00:06:04,350 --> 00:06:05,670 because whatever you think about them, 102 00:06:05,670 --> 00:06:07,130 insects are vitally important 103 00:06:07,130 --> 00:06:10,080 to every single human on the planet. 104 00:06:10,080 --> 00:06:11,250 They can be intimately involved 105 00:06:11,250 --> 00:06:13,330 in more or less every ecological process 106 00:06:13,330 --> 00:06:15,130 that you can think of: nutrient cycling, 107 00:06:15,130 --> 00:06:18,380 keeping the soils healthy, breaking down dead bodies, 108 00:06:18,380 --> 00:06:21,040 dead trees, leaves, bio control, 109 00:06:21,040 --> 00:06:23,807 controlling pest numbers and so on and so on. 110 00:06:23,807 --> 00:06:27,063 And most famously of course, they pollinate our crops. 111 00:06:30,340 --> 00:06:33,100 75% of the crops we grow globally 112 00:06:33,100 --> 00:06:34,640 require insect pollination. 113 00:06:34,640 --> 00:06:36,880 So we wouldn't have a whole sway, 114 00:06:36,880 --> 00:06:39,240 the fruits and vegetables that we require 115 00:06:39,240 --> 00:06:40,100 to keep us healthy. 116 00:06:40,100 --> 00:06:43,730 Everything from apples and cherries to blueberries, 117 00:06:43,730 --> 00:06:47,320 raspberries, strawberries, tomatoes, squashes, pumpkin, 118 00:06:47,320 --> 00:06:48,180 I could go on and on and on, 119 00:06:48,180 --> 00:06:51,400 even includes coffee and chocolate 120 00:06:51,400 --> 00:06:53,479 all require insect pollination. 121 00:06:53,479 --> 00:06:56,420 So life would be pretty miserable without these things, 122 00:06:56,420 --> 00:06:59,250 and the horrible truth is the millions of people 123 00:06:59,250 --> 00:07:02,220 would starve to death if we didn't have insect pollinators. 124 00:07:02,220 --> 00:07:04,777 So whatever you think about insects, we need them, 125 00:07:04,777 --> 00:07:06,327 and we need to look after them. 126 00:07:13,460 --> 00:07:14,510 So far as we know, 127 00:07:14,510 --> 00:07:17,430 insect declines are being driven by a whole bunch 128 00:07:17,430 --> 00:07:19,750 of different factors. 129 00:07:19,750 --> 00:07:23,070 Probably the biggest globally is habitat loss 130 00:07:23,070 --> 00:07:24,340 from the tropical forests 131 00:07:24,340 --> 00:07:27,603 to the flower rich hay meadows of the UK. 132 00:07:28,830 --> 00:07:30,430 In the UK we- 133 00:07:30,430 --> 00:07:31,263 a hundred years ago, 134 00:07:31,263 --> 00:07:33,700 we had about 7 million hectares 135 00:07:33,700 --> 00:07:37,295 of flower rich grasslands, hay meadows, and Jordan. 136 00:07:37,295 --> 00:07:39,220 They would have been teeming with butterflies 137 00:07:39,220 --> 00:07:42,280 and bumblebees and all sorts of other insects. 138 00:07:42,280 --> 00:07:45,660 And we destroyed 97% of it in the 20th century, 139 00:07:45,660 --> 00:07:47,930 and so habitat loss is a big one, 140 00:07:47,930 --> 00:07:49,380 but then on top of that, 141 00:07:49,380 --> 00:07:50,970 and it's kind of associated with it, 142 00:07:50,970 --> 00:07:52,810 a lot of that habitat loss is too intensive. 143 00:07:52,810 --> 00:07:54,210 Farming, which involves 144 00:07:54,210 --> 00:07:55,763 a lot of pesticide use, 145 00:07:56,780 --> 00:08:00,360 a whole barrage of insecticides and fungicides 146 00:08:00,360 --> 00:08:04,683 and herbicides going on to farmland all the time. 147 00:08:05,540 --> 00:08:08,090 We shouldn't really be surprised if they disappear. 148 00:08:10,520 --> 00:08:13,733 This issue seems to have come upon us quickly. 149 00:08:14,650 --> 00:08:17,140 Large scale declines that have happened 150 00:08:17,140 --> 00:08:18,760 within my lifetime, 151 00:08:18,760 --> 00:08:20,070 and to think that, you know, 152 00:08:20,070 --> 00:08:22,310 more than half the butterflies have gone 153 00:08:22,310 --> 00:08:24,260 since I was a kid, 154 00:08:24,260 --> 00:08:25,433 is really disturbing. 155 00:08:26,600 --> 00:08:27,500 It's not just Europe, 156 00:08:27,500 --> 00:08:29,683 it's certainly happening in North America, 157 00:08:31,340 --> 00:08:33,840 there's good data on Monarch butterflies, 158 00:08:33,840 --> 00:08:35,690 and how they've been fairing, 159 00:08:35,690 --> 00:08:37,440 but they've all but disappeared. 160 00:08:37,440 --> 00:08:38,940 Scientists estimate 161 00:08:38,940 --> 00:08:42,000 that a complete insect population collapse 162 00:08:42,000 --> 00:08:44,200 would mean the end of human life 163 00:08:44,200 --> 00:08:46,523 within two months. 164 00:08:48,130 --> 00:08:51,893 What then are our prospects for a positive outcome? 165 00:08:53,350 --> 00:08:54,600 Good news, 166 00:08:54,600 --> 00:08:57,130 insects can recover. 167 00:08:57,130 --> 00:08:59,180 Rather few of them have gone extinct yet, 168 00:08:59,180 --> 00:09:00,510 lots of them heading towards it 169 00:09:00,510 --> 00:09:03,380 but if we take action now it's not too late. 170 00:09:03,380 --> 00:09:04,770 And the nice thing about insects 171 00:09:04,770 --> 00:09:06,830 is they actually breed very quickly 172 00:09:06,830 --> 00:09:07,970 given the right conditions, 173 00:09:07,970 --> 00:09:11,110 so they could recover in no time at all 174 00:09:12,310 --> 00:09:13,730 if we gave them somewhere to live, 175 00:09:13,730 --> 00:09:14,563 something to eat, 176 00:09:14,563 --> 00:09:17,050 stop poisoning them and so on. 177 00:09:17,050 --> 00:09:19,730 But insects need places to recover 178 00:09:19,730 --> 00:09:21,270 and our scattered collection 179 00:09:21,270 --> 00:09:24,890 of nature parks and forest won't be enough. 180 00:09:24,890 --> 00:09:25,930 Right now, 181 00:09:25,930 --> 00:09:30,270 at least 85% of the land East of the Mississippi 182 00:09:30,270 --> 00:09:31,880 is privately owned, 183 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:34,760 and much of that property is a monoculture 184 00:09:34,760 --> 00:09:37,550 of suburban and urban lawns, 185 00:09:37,550 --> 00:09:40,693 or is being used for large scale food production. 186 00:09:42,060 --> 00:09:44,150 Landscapes that for insect 187 00:09:44,150 --> 00:09:46,370 and ecological purposes 188 00:09:46,370 --> 00:09:48,563 might as well be parking lots. 189 00:09:49,400 --> 00:09:54,090 In short we've drained, cut and paved nature, 190 00:09:54,090 --> 00:09:56,690 and we've curved it into pieces too small 191 00:09:56,690 --> 00:10:00,520 and isolated to sustain the native insects and animals 192 00:10:00,520 --> 00:10:03,123 that make our ecosystems work. 193 00:10:05,550 --> 00:10:06,650 Douglas Tallamy, 194 00:10:06,650 --> 00:10:08,320 the chief entomology professor 195 00:10:08,320 --> 00:10:10,280 at the university of Delaware, 196 00:10:10,280 --> 00:10:12,567 has a New York times bestseller out, 197 00:10:12,567 --> 00:10:15,000 "Nature's Best Hope". 198 00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:17,213 And he has a plan. 199 00:10:17,213 --> 00:10:20,260 (birds chirping) 200 00:10:20,260 --> 00:10:22,690 If you look at the way we landscape, 201 00:10:22,690 --> 00:10:24,840 {\an8}humans are here and nature some place else, 202 00:10:24,840 --> 00:10:27,030 {\an8}and then there's no more someplace else's. 203 00:10:27,030 --> 00:10:28,980 And as we expand the human population, 204 00:10:28,980 --> 00:10:31,170 we keep making these sterile landscapes, 205 00:10:31,170 --> 00:10:32,570 and nature is pushed out. 206 00:10:32,570 --> 00:10:34,823 So that is why things are declining. 207 00:10:36,090 --> 00:10:37,120 You might think 208 00:10:37,120 --> 00:10:39,290 that with so many species of insects 209 00:10:39,290 --> 00:10:40,600 in their abundance, 210 00:10:40,600 --> 00:10:42,960 the system should be able to adjust 211 00:10:42,960 --> 00:10:46,133 to human population expansion and lifestyles, 212 00:10:46,990 --> 00:10:49,600 but that's not how it works, 213 00:10:49,600 --> 00:10:53,550 in fact, 90% of the insects that eat plants, 214 00:10:53,550 --> 00:10:57,060 develop and reproduce only on certain plants 215 00:10:57,060 --> 00:11:00,123 with which they share an evolutionary history. 216 00:11:01,570 --> 00:11:03,700 Specialization is really common 217 00:11:03,700 --> 00:11:05,380 in the world of insects, 218 00:11:05,380 --> 00:11:06,690 both with pollinators 219 00:11:06,690 --> 00:11:09,410 and with the insects that eat plants. 220 00:11:09,410 --> 00:11:12,610 We've got over 4,000 species of native bees, 221 00:11:12,610 --> 00:11:14,960 and at least a third of them can only reproduce 222 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:18,053 in the pollen of particular plant genera. 223 00:11:19,850 --> 00:11:22,360 And the reason all these insects are so specialized 224 00:11:22,360 --> 00:11:24,870 is because plants don't want to be eaten, 225 00:11:24,870 --> 00:11:25,920 they want to capture the energy 226 00:11:25,920 --> 00:11:26,870 from the sun and use it 227 00:11:26,870 --> 00:11:28,480 for their own growth and reproduction, 228 00:11:28,480 --> 00:11:32,250 so they protect their tissues with nasty compounds, 229 00:11:32,250 --> 00:11:33,500 and the insects have to adapt 230 00:11:33,500 --> 00:11:35,590 to those phytochemicals in order 231 00:11:35,590 --> 00:11:37,890 to be able to eat the plant. 232 00:11:37,890 --> 00:11:40,660 So they develop specialized enzymes and behaviors 233 00:11:40,660 --> 00:11:43,640 and life history adaptations 234 00:11:43,640 --> 00:11:46,223 that minimize their exposure to these compounds. 235 00:11:47,790 --> 00:11:50,610 The Monarch, for example, is good at milkweeds, 236 00:11:50,610 --> 00:11:52,320 but it wouldn't be able to handle Oak trees, 237 00:11:52,320 --> 00:11:54,400 and that's why if you want to have caterpillars 238 00:11:54,400 --> 00:11:55,330 in your yard, 239 00:11:55,330 --> 00:11:58,950 you need to have the plants that create those caterpillars. 240 00:11:58,950 --> 00:12:01,020 They're not going to eat any other plants. 241 00:12:01,020 --> 00:12:03,020 Why would you want caterpillars in your yard? 242 00:12:03,020 --> 00:12:04,830 Well, if you want birds in your yard 243 00:12:04,830 --> 00:12:06,520 you got to have these Caterpillar. 244 00:12:06,520 --> 00:12:07,470 Chickadees, for example 245 00:12:07,470 --> 00:12:09,910 take 6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars 246 00:12:09,910 --> 00:12:11,690 to make one clutch of chickadees. 247 00:12:21,340 --> 00:12:23,190 An insect apocalypse 248 00:12:23,190 --> 00:12:24,950 would devastate the animals 249 00:12:24,950 --> 00:12:26,763 that depend on them for food, 250 00:12:27,920 --> 00:12:29,713 including humans. 251 00:12:31,440 --> 00:12:34,750 We would lose at least a third of our crops, 252 00:12:34,750 --> 00:12:37,483 and our food web would collapse. 253 00:12:39,920 --> 00:12:41,280 If insects were to disappear, 254 00:12:41,280 --> 00:12:42,990 particularly our pollinators, 255 00:12:42,990 --> 00:12:46,603 it would hit certain aspects of our agriculture very hard. 256 00:12:47,570 --> 00:12:50,220 The production of fruits and vegetables, 257 00:12:50,220 --> 00:12:54,380 apples, for example, depend on bee pollination, tomatoes. 258 00:12:54,380 --> 00:12:56,960 Most of the fruits are being pollinated. 259 00:12:56,960 --> 00:12:58,780 So matter of fact, in China, 260 00:12:58,780 --> 00:13:00,670 where they have lost a lot of their pollinators, 261 00:13:00,670 --> 00:13:03,100 they've got guys up on ladders 262 00:13:03,100 --> 00:13:06,280 with paintbrushes trying to pollinate peaches 263 00:13:06,280 --> 00:13:09,020 and other crops that you know- 264 00:13:09,020 --> 00:13:10,470 It's possible, but boy, 265 00:13:10,470 --> 00:13:12,920 it is sure easier to keep the pollinators around. 266 00:13:14,710 --> 00:13:17,120 The real reason we can't lose our pollinators 267 00:13:17,120 --> 00:13:20,140 is because they're pollinating 80% of all plants, 268 00:13:20,140 --> 00:13:22,660 and 90% of all flowering plants. 269 00:13:22,660 --> 00:13:23,810 If we lost our pollinators, 270 00:13:23,810 --> 00:13:26,880 we would lose 80 to 90% of the plants on the planet, 271 00:13:26,880 --> 00:13:28,183 that is not an option. 272 00:13:29,020 --> 00:13:31,440 So we need pollinators every place we need plants, 273 00:13:31,440 --> 00:13:32,480 which is every place. 274 00:13:32,480 --> 00:13:34,590 Anybody who's managing land anywhere, 275 00:13:34,590 --> 00:13:37,740 in your yard, your corporate landscape, 276 00:13:37,740 --> 00:13:39,330 your roadside, 277 00:13:39,330 --> 00:13:40,980 they need to be making pollinators, 278 00:13:40,980 --> 00:13:42,340 absolutely everywhere. 279 00:13:44,087 --> 00:13:47,087 (suspenseful music) 280 00:13:51,870 --> 00:13:53,420 So the familiar issues 281 00:13:53,420 --> 00:13:56,590 of overdevelopment, pesticides 282 00:13:56,590 --> 00:13:58,630 and our ever expanding population 283 00:13:58,630 --> 00:14:01,453 are to blame for the insect population decline. 284 00:14:02,480 --> 00:14:04,453 But what can we do about it? 285 00:14:07,190 --> 00:14:10,600 Tallamy points out that the national parks and preserves, 286 00:14:10,600 --> 00:14:14,940 while well-intentioned, only separate us from nature, 287 00:14:14,940 --> 00:14:16,280 and cannot do enough 288 00:14:16,280 --> 00:14:19,420 to foster the interconnectivity necessary 289 00:14:19,420 --> 00:14:21,853 for biodiversity and recovery. 290 00:14:23,120 --> 00:14:27,170 Meanwhile, across the United States and around the world, 291 00:14:27,170 --> 00:14:30,350 millions upon millions of acres of land 292 00:14:30,350 --> 00:14:33,290 are covered in lawn grass, 293 00:14:33,290 --> 00:14:36,610 a symbol of prosperity and social order, 294 00:14:36,610 --> 00:14:40,523 but otherwise an ecological wasteland. 295 00:14:41,630 --> 00:14:44,260 More than 80% of the United States 296 00:14:44,260 --> 00:14:46,400 is privately owned. 297 00:14:46,400 --> 00:14:49,620 Tallamy sees that this is where we must join together 298 00:14:49,620 --> 00:14:51,183 to create the solution. 299 00:14:53,300 --> 00:14:56,930 We must practice conservation right where we live, 300 00:14:56,930 --> 00:14:58,373 work and farm. 301 00:14:59,600 --> 00:15:01,200 Dr. Tallamy notes, 302 00:15:01,200 --> 00:15:03,970 that more than 40 million acres of land 303 00:15:03,970 --> 00:15:05,480 East of the Mississippi, 304 00:15:05,480 --> 00:15:08,190 an area, the size of new England 305 00:15:08,190 --> 00:15:10,563 is dedicated to lawn space, 306 00:15:11,660 --> 00:15:14,250 and turf grass does essentially nothing 307 00:15:14,250 --> 00:15:16,670 to foster biodiversity. 308 00:15:16,670 --> 00:15:21,123 He proposes the concept of a home grown national park. 309 00:15:22,690 --> 00:15:24,540 Conservation has to happen everywhere, 310 00:15:24,540 --> 00:15:25,980 which means we've got to learn 311 00:15:25,980 --> 00:15:29,713 to share our human dominated spaces with nature. 312 00:15:30,680 --> 00:15:32,960 The easiest thing for a typical homeowner to do 313 00:15:32,960 --> 00:15:35,130 is think about reducing the lawn. 314 00:15:35,130 --> 00:15:38,410 We have over 40 million acres of land in the U.S, 315 00:15:38,410 --> 00:15:39,830 it's a dead space. 316 00:15:39,830 --> 00:15:42,530 So I recommend cutting the lawn in half, 317 00:15:42,530 --> 00:15:44,290 cut your area of lawn in half. 318 00:15:44,290 --> 00:15:45,360 If everybody did that, 319 00:15:45,360 --> 00:15:49,000 that would give us 20 million acres of land 320 00:15:49,000 --> 00:15:50,450 we could use in conservation. 321 00:15:51,960 --> 00:15:53,500 Replanting just half 322 00:15:53,500 --> 00:15:56,320 of our lawn space with native plants, 323 00:15:56,320 --> 00:15:58,470 especially flowering plants, 324 00:15:58,470 --> 00:16:00,060 will support the insects 325 00:16:00,060 --> 00:16:02,103 that support us and our food web. 326 00:16:03,000 --> 00:16:06,690 We need the native plants to feed native bugs, 327 00:16:06,690 --> 00:16:11,170 and even the odds for insect and human survival. 328 00:16:11,170 --> 00:16:12,490 If we do this, 329 00:16:12,490 --> 00:16:15,940 we will create ecological patches and corridors 330 00:16:15,940 --> 00:16:17,660 that would equal an area 331 00:16:17,660 --> 00:16:21,610 as large as all of our major national parks, 332 00:16:21,610 --> 00:16:25,680 Yellowstone, Yosemite, the grand Tetons, 333 00:16:25,680 --> 00:16:30,680 the grand Canyon, Denali, the great Smokies and so on. 334 00:16:33,020 --> 00:16:35,270 We will be part of the solution 335 00:16:35,270 --> 00:16:37,053 instead of part of the problem. 336 00:16:38,590 --> 00:16:40,910 We've got to think about plants 337 00:16:40,910 --> 00:16:42,610 as more than decoration, 338 00:16:42,610 --> 00:16:44,900 they do important things, 339 00:16:44,900 --> 00:16:46,130 and they've got to start performing 340 00:16:46,130 --> 00:16:48,670 those ecological roles in our landscapes. 341 00:16:48,670 --> 00:16:50,970 And if we choose the wrong plants, 342 00:16:50,970 --> 00:16:53,013 the ones that don't perform those roles, 343 00:16:53,970 --> 00:16:56,400 that creates local ecosystem collapse. 344 00:16:56,400 --> 00:16:57,320 And if everybody does it, 345 00:16:57,320 --> 00:17:00,200 then you get general ecosystem collapse, 346 00:17:00,200 --> 00:17:01,770 and there are big ramifications to that. 347 00:17:01,770 --> 00:17:03,490 It's the ecosystems on this planet 348 00:17:03,490 --> 00:17:04,710 that keep humans alive. 349 00:17:04,710 --> 00:17:06,810 They produce ecosystem services, you know, 350 00:17:06,810 --> 00:17:09,660 oxygen, clean water, all that stuff. 351 00:17:09,660 --> 00:17:11,000 That has to happen everywhere, 352 00:17:11,000 --> 00:17:13,053 not just in little parks and preserves. 353 00:17:14,600 --> 00:17:16,010 You can create a new national park, 354 00:17:16,010 --> 00:17:18,210 call it Homegrown national park. 355 00:17:18,210 --> 00:17:19,320 You know, 20 million acres 356 00:17:19,320 --> 00:17:23,243 is bigger than all of our major national parks combined. 357 00:17:26,490 --> 00:17:29,660 So you're going to choose those powerful plants, 358 00:17:29,660 --> 00:17:31,080 I call them Keystone plants, 359 00:17:31,080 --> 00:17:33,200 Oaks being the most important plant 360 00:17:33,200 --> 00:17:35,003 you could put in your yard. 361 00:17:36,920 --> 00:17:39,830 Another thing that any landowners should consider: 362 00:17:39,830 --> 00:17:41,650 remove the invasive plants 363 00:17:41,650 --> 00:17:43,670 that you have planted ornamentally 364 00:17:43,670 --> 00:17:44,503 on your yard. 365 00:17:45,620 --> 00:17:48,410 These things have run a muck in our natural areas, 366 00:17:48,410 --> 00:17:49,960 and we end up with an understory 367 00:17:49,960 --> 00:17:52,930 of invasive ornamentals from Asia 368 00:17:52,930 --> 00:17:54,760 that aren't supporting our insects 369 00:17:54,760 --> 00:17:57,730 because our insects have not been here long enough 370 00:17:57,730 --> 00:17:59,100 to be able to come up 371 00:17:59,100 --> 00:18:01,080 with the adaptations needed 372 00:18:01,080 --> 00:18:02,640 to get around the chemical defenses 373 00:18:02,640 --> 00:18:05,080 that are in those plants from Asia. 374 00:18:05,080 --> 00:18:07,620 So it creates biological deserts, 375 00:18:07,620 --> 00:18:09,620 and the most responsible thing we can do 376 00:18:09,620 --> 00:18:11,360 is to make sure that our property 377 00:18:11,360 --> 00:18:13,833 doesn't have any of those invasive plants on it. 378 00:18:14,810 --> 00:18:15,920 Pollination is one 379 00:18:15,920 --> 00:18:17,670 of the most critical functions 380 00:18:17,670 --> 00:18:19,730 that insects perform, 381 00:18:19,730 --> 00:18:21,380 and to accomplish that 382 00:18:21,380 --> 00:18:23,610 they need to have good reasons to travel 383 00:18:23,610 --> 00:18:25,090 from place to place, 384 00:18:25,090 --> 00:18:26,840 and from yard to yard, 385 00:18:26,840 --> 00:18:29,200 and across the country. 386 00:18:29,200 --> 00:18:32,973 And they need to be on the job pretty much all year long. 387 00:18:34,010 --> 00:18:35,900 Plant what we call pollinator gardens, 388 00:18:35,900 --> 00:18:38,790 and it's simply a matter of adding flowering plants 389 00:18:38,790 --> 00:18:40,320 to your landscape. 390 00:18:40,320 --> 00:18:43,990 Pollinators need forage all season long. 391 00:18:43,990 --> 00:18:45,230 There are native bees flying 392 00:18:45,230 --> 00:18:48,490 from March to November in new England. 393 00:18:48,490 --> 00:18:49,820 So in the rest of the country, 394 00:18:49,820 --> 00:18:52,083 they're around nearly all the time, 395 00:18:52,940 --> 00:18:54,160 which means we need blooming phases 396 00:18:54,160 --> 00:18:55,923 as continuously as possible. 397 00:18:57,040 --> 00:18:58,763 What more can we do? 398 00:18:59,920 --> 00:19:02,150 Another very important thing we need to do though, 399 00:19:02,150 --> 00:19:05,290 is think about light pollution at night. 400 00:19:05,290 --> 00:19:06,710 We turn on our security lights, 401 00:19:06,710 --> 00:19:07,820 we have our porch lights on, 402 00:19:07,820 --> 00:19:09,540 everybody's got to have a light on. 403 00:19:09,540 --> 00:19:11,750 Those lights are killing insects all the time, 404 00:19:11,750 --> 00:19:12,787 and I understand people say, 405 00:19:12,787 --> 00:19:14,210 "I gotta have my security light on 406 00:19:14,210 --> 00:19:16,060 or the bad man will come." 407 00:19:16,060 --> 00:19:18,390 If you put a motion sensor on your security light, 408 00:19:18,390 --> 00:19:20,370 it only turns on when the bad man comes, 409 00:19:20,370 --> 00:19:21,840 and the first thing you realize 410 00:19:21,840 --> 00:19:23,790 is how often the bad man does not come. 411 00:19:26,060 --> 00:19:28,883 If we create this homegrown national park, 412 00:19:29,850 --> 00:19:33,910 we will bring nature essentially right to our living spaces. 413 00:19:33,910 --> 00:19:35,610 Won't be like going to Yosemite, 414 00:19:35,610 --> 00:19:37,510 it won't be like going to Yellowstone, 415 00:19:37,510 --> 00:19:39,400 you won't have bison, 416 00:19:39,400 --> 00:19:41,610 but you will have a lot of those specialized 417 00:19:41,610 --> 00:19:44,003 natural interactions right in your yard, 418 00:19:44,910 --> 00:19:46,890 and it'll give you the opportunity 419 00:19:46,890 --> 00:19:49,930 to either create a personal relationship 420 00:19:49,930 --> 00:19:51,380 with nature for the first time 421 00:19:51,380 --> 00:19:53,050 or recreate one that you've lost 422 00:19:53,050 --> 00:19:55,250 that you might've had as a child. 423 00:19:55,250 --> 00:19:57,030 But particularly for our kids, 424 00:19:57,030 --> 00:19:59,070 so many of our kids have never had a chance 425 00:19:59,070 --> 00:20:00,754 to interact with nature at all. 426 00:20:00,754 --> 00:20:03,970 (upbeat music) 427 00:20:03,970 --> 00:20:06,480 If our kids can walk out their door 428 00:20:06,480 --> 00:20:08,290 at their yard and get to establish 429 00:20:08,290 --> 00:20:11,070 a relationship with some part of the natural world, 430 00:20:11,070 --> 00:20:13,480 because it's right there in their yard. 431 00:20:13,480 --> 00:20:15,910 Our kids are the future stewards of our planet, 432 00:20:15,910 --> 00:20:17,550 and if they don't know what they're stewarding 433 00:20:17,550 --> 00:20:18,740 or that they have to steward, 434 00:20:18,740 --> 00:20:20,830 they're going to be lousy stewards. 435 00:20:20,830 --> 00:20:23,320 So this is an investment in our future, 436 00:20:23,320 --> 00:20:25,070 it's an investment in our current health, 437 00:20:25,070 --> 00:20:26,960 there's all kinds of health benefits 438 00:20:26,960 --> 00:20:30,060 to peaceful times in the natural world, 439 00:20:30,060 --> 00:20:31,720 and it will save the biodiversity 440 00:20:31,720 --> 00:20:33,293 that runs our ecosystems. 441 00:20:34,950 --> 00:20:39,820 So, is this a big ask of a basic property owner? 442 00:20:39,820 --> 00:20:40,780 And where's the proof 443 00:20:40,780 --> 00:20:42,280 that this is worth the effort? 444 00:20:43,938 --> 00:20:47,500 Tallemy's experience with his own 10 acre place, 445 00:20:47,500 --> 00:20:51,500 just 15 miles from his office and university classrooms 446 00:20:51,500 --> 00:20:52,410 has turned out 447 00:20:52,410 --> 00:20:55,783 to be an ideal suburban ecological experiment. 448 00:20:56,820 --> 00:21:00,210 He replaced the invasive plants with native species, 449 00:21:00,210 --> 00:21:02,970 and so far he's counted and photographed 450 00:21:02,970 --> 00:21:06,910 more than a thousand species of moths. 451 00:21:06,910 --> 00:21:09,240 It's an indication of what a person 452 00:21:09,240 --> 00:21:12,370 with minimal expense and experience can do 453 00:21:13,260 --> 00:21:16,323 to be part of an ecological recovery. 454 00:21:19,930 --> 00:21:21,050 My wife and I bought a farm 455 00:21:21,050 --> 00:21:24,130 that had been broken up in Southeast Pennsylvania 456 00:21:24,130 --> 00:21:25,020 with 10 acres, 457 00:21:25,020 --> 00:21:26,340 but it had been mowed for hay. 458 00:21:26,340 --> 00:21:30,120 I mean, there was not much there when we moved in, 459 00:21:30,120 --> 00:21:31,940 and actually they had stopped mowing us for hay, 460 00:21:31,940 --> 00:21:33,960 and what was there were all the invasive species 461 00:21:33,960 --> 00:21:34,793 from Asia. 462 00:21:37,090 --> 00:21:38,790 So our goal was to remove them 463 00:21:38,790 --> 00:21:40,960 and put in native plants, 464 00:21:40,960 --> 00:21:42,100 and in the meantime, 465 00:21:42,100 --> 00:21:45,240 I started to realize how important all of this was. 466 00:21:45,240 --> 00:21:46,580 About four years ago, 467 00:21:46,580 --> 00:21:49,230 I had noticed so many moth species at our house 468 00:21:49,230 --> 00:21:51,800 that I made it a goal to start photographing 469 00:21:51,800 --> 00:21:53,170 as many as I could. 470 00:21:53,170 --> 00:21:54,910 That would be my photographic record 471 00:21:54,910 --> 00:21:57,700 of the number of species at our house. 472 00:21:57,700 --> 00:22:01,943 I am up to 1,013 species of moths at our house. 473 00:22:04,570 --> 00:22:05,730 The greatest benefit 474 00:22:05,730 --> 00:22:08,760 of the homegrown national park concept 475 00:22:08,760 --> 00:22:11,220 is that it will provide ecological corridors 476 00:22:11,220 --> 00:22:14,820 for insects to use, to connect and thrive, 477 00:22:14,820 --> 00:22:17,583 which will allow us to do the same. 478 00:22:18,690 --> 00:22:21,890 Well, we've also recorded 59 species 479 00:22:21,890 --> 00:22:25,400 of terrestrial birds that bred at our house. 480 00:22:25,400 --> 00:22:28,910 That's 38% of all the terrestrial birds in Pennsylvania 481 00:22:28,910 --> 00:22:30,900 on just 10 acres, 482 00:22:30,900 --> 00:22:31,733 which simply says, 483 00:22:31,733 --> 00:22:33,350 if you put the plants 484 00:22:33,350 --> 00:22:36,490 that support our wildlife back into our spaces, 485 00:22:36,490 --> 00:22:37,720 the wildlife will come. 486 00:22:37,720 --> 00:22:40,260 It's not going to come after they're extinct, 487 00:22:40,260 --> 00:22:42,523 so we we've got to do it soon. 488 00:22:45,000 --> 00:22:47,860 World Wildlife Fund two weeks ago said, 489 00:22:47,860 --> 00:22:48,830 well, we've lost two thirds 490 00:22:48,830 --> 00:22:52,490 of the wildlife on planet earth since 1970, 491 00:22:52,490 --> 00:22:54,280 and I'm thinking, "Not at my house." 492 00:22:54,280 --> 00:22:56,230 We've gained at least two-thirds, 493 00:22:56,230 --> 00:22:58,630 I'm sure we've increased biodiversity by more than that, 494 00:22:58,630 --> 00:23:00,600 simply by putting the plants back. 495 00:23:00,600 --> 00:23:02,833 So the message there is it's reversible. 496 00:23:03,680 --> 00:23:05,000 This is not impossible, 497 00:23:05,000 --> 00:23:07,190 it is a very gloomy statistic, 498 00:23:07,190 --> 00:23:10,250 but if everybody made it a goal to recreate life 499 00:23:10,250 --> 00:23:11,553 where they live, 500 00:23:12,500 --> 00:23:14,660 85% of the U.S is privately owned, 501 00:23:14,660 --> 00:23:16,900 or at least East of the Mississippi. 502 00:23:16,900 --> 00:23:18,772 We'd be 85% done. 503 00:23:18,772 --> 00:23:21,355 (upbeat music)