🧵 bugs with BUILT IN antennas
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:25:01 UTC No. 16198604
bugs with built in antennas have severely diminished in numbers in early 2000s, more in 2010s and almost disappeared in 2020s
I am telling you it is the telecommunications: 3G, 4G, 5G (not 2G, that shit is safe)
all flying bugs have well developed antennas
SPIDERS do NOT have antennas
and spiders havent disappeared either!
spider numbers have still been greatly reduced due to there not being bugs to eat
but these lifeforms are very low in numbers:
>butterflies and moths
>wasps and especially bees
>mosquitos are less than what they used to be (which is the only good thing about this ordeal)
>lace winged green bugs (its a small emerald colored shiny bug that has dragonfly wings but still considerably smaller than dragonfly, it has butterfly like antennae and shiny diamond eyes and it can bite with its mouth but has no stinger on the abdomen)
>non-pest like beetles (I am talking about ladybugs which are predators and eat smaller bugs, theyre numbers are reduced)
>lack of grasshoppers, they have stopped singing as well
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:27:12 UTC No. 16198606
>>16198604
You misunderstand, the bugs have not disappeared, they've passed on to another dimension harnessing the power of superior comm tech. They weren't able to do it with 2G and 1G because they were too weak, we'll get a cyber bug invasion in the next decade or so and they'll take over humanity as gods.
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:28:44 UTC No. 16198608
>>16198604
doesn’t stop the cockroaches from fucking around in my fucking house
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:29:16 UTC No. 16198609
>>16198604
i love killing moths. what a fucking annoying group of creatures.
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:35:30 UTC No. 16198615
>>16198608
I am guessing cockroaches do fine because they barely fly and are accustomed to go everywhere by walking
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:38:29 UTC No. 16198617
>>16198604
>>16198609
Now that I think about it, moths used to swarm every light at night. At football games you could look up at the big lights and see the moths flying around the lights. I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen this happen, but maybe I just haven’t had many opportunities to observe it
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:50:20 UTC No. 16198623
>>16198617
I am thinking that now only those moths not so interested in light sources, have survived
Because there are lights everywhere now, it wasnt so apparent 20 years ago and moths were quickly covering a sole light post in a middlle of nowehere
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 03:52:47 UTC No. 16198624
>bugs with built in antennas have severely diminished in numbers in early 2000s, more in 2010s and almost disappeared in 2020s
Is that something being tracked? I know there was that bee thing but I guess it turned out to be bullshit
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 04:07:51 UTC No. 16198636
>>16198624
someone did note the greatly diminished numbers of butterflies
as butterfly caterpillars eat green plants only, this has an effect on there being a lot more green plants
for example the nettle, this was a plant once eaten by the caterpillars which reduces the plant amounts but now its everywhere
Anonymous at Wed, 29 May 2024 19:02:47 UTC No. 16199446
>>16198604
>bugs with built in antennas have severely diminished in numbers in early 2000s, more in 2010s and almost disappeared in 2020s
Interesting, can you show us where you saw that? You might be onto something if true, indeed.