Action for insects

Action for Insects

Action for Insects

Will you help the most important creatures on the planet?

41% of insect species face extinction.

The loss of their habitats and overuse of pesticides are two major reasons why these little creatures are dying out eight times faster than large mammals.

However, it’s not too late and with your help, we can put insects into recovery.

Claim your FREE Action for Insects guide and start to make a difference today

By working together, we can change the future of insects. Starting right now, you can make small changes in your home, lifestyle and community that will help these fascinating creatures. Follow the advice in our Action for Insects guide and create an insect-friendly garden that is teaming with wildlife.

Take action for insects

Photo courtesy of Barbara Moore

Photo courtesy of Barbara Moore

How will your Free Action for Insects guide help you to make a difference?

Packed full of easy to follow advice and tips. Our Action for Insects guide will help you to:

  • Create a wildlife and insect-friendly garden
  • Plan your garden and choose the right plants
  • Stop using harmful chemicals inside your home and in your garden
  • Make lifestyle changes that will benefit insects
  • Find out more interesting facts and information to help create a Wilder Suffolk
Take Action for Insects

Find out why insects are dying out at such an alarming rate

This report by Professor Dave Goulson summaries some of the best available evidence of insect declines and proposes a comprehensive series of actions that can be taken at all levels of society to recover their diversity and abundance.

Help reverse the decline of insects

Read this new report ‘Reversing the Decline of Insects’ by Professor Dave Goulson.

This report sets out how important it is that we act now to reverse the decline of insects and see them thrive once more; with examples from organisations and individuals and a community guide to taking action.

We are calling on the Government to reverse the decline of insects by:

  • Setting an ambitious pesticide reduction target, as good as, if not better than, the EU’s proposed target to reduce by 50% the overall use of – and risk from – chemical pesticides by 2030
  • No weakening of UK pesticide standards through future trade deals
  • Support for farmers to adopt insect-friendly farming practices

We believe that reversing the decline of insects is possible if:

  • A network of nature-rich areas is created covering at least 30% of the UK, and legally binding targets are set for nature’s recovery which are monitored and enforced
  • Local councils prioritise green recovery and create more nature-rich places where insects can thrive and make cities, towns and parishes pesticide-free
  • Everyone steps up to become an insect champion

5 reasons why we should we care

Without insects many birds, bats, reptiles, amphibians, small mammals and fish would die out as they would have nothing to eat

87% of all plant species require animal pollination, most of it delivered by insect – that is pretty much all of them except grasses and conifers.

In addition, 3 out of 4 of all the crops that we grow require pollination by insects

Only by working together can we address the causes of insect loss, halt and reverse them and secure a sustainable future for insect life and for ourselves.

Insects are amazing

Tell me more

Suffolk Wildlife Trust's position on pesticides

We use herbicides selectively for specific tasks on our nature reserves, for example to control non-native invasive species, to control bracken on heathland and to maintain the surface of our wheelchair-accessible paths. We always seek to minimise their use where possible and will remain vigilant in doing this.

Don’t farmers need pesticides to grow enough food?

In many parts of Britain, traditional family farms have given way to large agri-businesses, typified by large fields, often managed by external contractors, maintained as near perfect monocultures by high inputs of pesticides and fertilizers.

The result is a landscape that produces more food, more cheaply, than it used to, but is largely inhospitable to wildlife and provides employment for very few people. The low price of food on the supermarket shelves that we have become used to does not reflect the true environmental costs of its production. It is also important to note that farmers only receive a fraction of the retail sale price of food, so the cost of improved on-farm practice would have a relatively small impact on shoppers.

Recent studies from France estimate that total pesticide use can be reduced by 42% without significant reductions to yield or profit

France is one of the biggest consumers of pesticides in Europe (per unit of agricultural area). In 2013, after controversy over levels of pesticide concentration in drinking water, the French government set a target of a 50% decrease in pesticide use, promoting the principles of agroecology and advocating integrated management of pests for a reduction of pesticide reliance. 

Food security and economic impacts were a major consideration for policy advisors and researchers:

“We demonstrated that low pesticide use rarely decreases productivity and profitability in arable farms. We analysed the potential conflicts between pesticide use and productivity or profitability with data from 946 non-organic arable commercial farms showing contrasting levels of pesticide use and covering a wide range of production situations in France. We failed to detect any conflict between low pesticide use and both high productivity and high profitability in 77% of the farms.” Lechenet et al. 2017

How do I stop my plants and vegetables being eaten if I don’t use pesticides in my garden?

Gardening without chemicals is a good way to ensure that the food and plants you grow are free of pesticides or chemicals, thriving without the extra expense of dangerous products that are harmful to our wildlife. If you’ve used chemicals in the past, this might sound like an invitation to every pest for miles around to shred your garden ... and that might well happen at first. But, with time and patience, you’ll end up with a rewarding, healthier garden for ditching the chemicals.

Spraying to deal with pests can often kill the predators too, or at least make them want to avoid your garden. When you stop using chemicals, aphids are the first creatures to return as they have a short breeding cycle. Their predators may take longer to come back, but stick with it and know it will be better in the long run!

In the end you’ll wonder why you ever needed chemicals in the first place.

We can’t turn the clock back to how things used to be so what can we do today?

We can turn our cities, towns, villages and gardens into a buzzing network of insect-friendly habitats. We have about ½ million hectares of gardens in the UK, plus city parks and green spaces, school playing fields, railway embankments and cuttings, road verges and roundabouts; if managed favourably, and if we avoid pesticide use these areas could go a long way towards creating a national ‘Nature Recovery Network’.

250,000 miles of road verges.  More could be managed for wildlife by sowing insect friendly seed mixes, mowing later in the year, and removing the cuttings. Green bridges should be a part of transport infrastructure projects.

430,000 hectares of gardens.  Wildflowers in gardens have huge potential to help pollinators such as bees. A network of small patches could help bees thrive in urban areas.

52 million people. 80% of the UK’s population live in urban areas. New parks, street trees, green roofs and walls are an important way to help everyone experience nature in daily life.

Our public spaces. Two thirds of amenity land is short mown grass, but meadow habitats support eight times more wildlife. Just allowing more flower species in the grass, and mowing some areas less frequently has been shown to be of huge benefit to insects. Greener and more biodiverse neighbourhoods provide health and wellbeing benefits for people.

Our farmland. 70% of UK land is farmland, so making our farms more wildlife friendly and sustainable is vital

What pressure is being put upon government to act?

The Wildlife Trusts and our Greener UK partners are campaigning for UK Government to pass new laws that will not only protect but will also help to restore green spaces and wild places. 

We want a Nature Recovery Network enshrined in law to:

  • protect existing wildlife sites and map out where wildlife ought to be, joining up important places for wildlife, while ensuring more people can live closer to nature
  • Set targets for environmental improvement and nature’s recovery;
  • Require plans to be produced to integrate national and local regulation, spending, investment and action. 

You can find out more about our Wilder Future campaign here.