«What you have to
understand about insects is they're all coldblooded, so they rely on the environment to tell them what their body should be doing,» said Missy Henriksen, a spokeswoman for the National Pest Management Association.
Not exact matches
The more scientists
understand about how
insects respond to and sense heat, the better they can
understand insect migration in response to rising global temperatures and the spread of disease through
insect bites.
So from what i've read and
understood is that volcanic eruptions vs Human almost amount to the amount of pollution we put out in the past 200 years... but what
about the forest fires,
insects, and plants... from what i've descovered a combination of all these things put out more Co2 and greehouse emmission than we could ever put out.
In the video below, produced by Spine Films and shared with us by the California Academy of Sciences» bioGraphic magazine, scientist Iain Couzin talks
about the research and its broader implications in better
understanding everything from how
insects swarm to how people react to the media.