I think that if all insects died, since they are at the bottom of the food chain all other animals that feed from them would start diyng and eventually would get to us human too.
Without ribosomes, protein synthesis would come to a halt, disrupting all cellular functions that rely on proteins. This would lead to severe consequences such as cell death and eventually organ failure, as proteins are crucial for various processes such as structural support, enzyme function, and signaling within the cell.
There would be chaos and confusion as the world would struggle to accommodate the sudden increase in population. Existing infrastructure and resources would likely be overwhelmed, leading to a global crisis. Society would face challenges in providing for the basic needs and well-being of everyone.
they need to split
A very hard answer as it is far reaching to explain what exactly would happen. I will give you the general answer which should lead you to understand how big an event it would be. Bugs in a pond dying would be the seed effect of what would grow massive natural events to shift course completely. Bugs are born in such large numbers because 'nature' knows most will be eaten by bats, fish, reptiles, birds and more bird, frogs, the list goes on. So, no bugs, all these other species take a big hit, and their babies die off from starvation and many of the adults too causing most of these animals, etc., to become extinct in that area or if only in this one system, extinct from the planet. So now all the little creatures are dead, and what eats those? What depends on all the bugs making all the froggs, lizards, birds, etc., good and fat and with lots of babies? The animals that eat them, leading all the way up to little old US...who if we depended on this pond, or worse a lake or ocean even, we would suffer horribly. Great question. I think my answer explains as best as possible without getting into a lot of boring details and still gives a broad understanding of how important the smallest of creatures can be. I am not certain, but on something I recently read, bats themselves are responsible for up to or over 30% of all insect eating, just imagine if there were no bats and work your way backwards. Either way you go, it means bad news for US and the BUGS and all in between. Balance has always been the key. Global balance. If you are interested in more details for a paper for school, you may want something like this up on an encyclopedia site of some kind or educational site, etc. If you are interested in Global Balance and preservation ideals, there are tons of sites you can Google, etc. Hope I helped, good care. MG
They're not. Bugs and insects are different orders of animals. Insects are arthropods; comprising head, thorax and body, normally with 2 pairs of wings and 3 pairs of legs. Bugs do not have these traits ie, a centipede an earwig or a tick is a bug.
There would be bad things that happened to insects if all of the guinea fowl died. These insects that fed on the guinea fowl would also die.
all the insects would die
Taking out the largest group of animals on earth from an ecosystem would most likely destroy it. Insects outnumber humans I believe 100 to 1 if not more.
The population of water snails, tadpoles, and stickleback would become higher because the water beetles would not be eating them. Then the tadpoles, sticklebacks, and water snails would eat all the food that all the other insects in the pond were eating.
we would all be eaten by flies
We would have all died
AnswerThere are more insects in the world than any other kind of animal and spiders are the #1 predator of insects worldwide. If all the spiders disappeared tomorrow we would quickly be overwhelmed by insects, some of which cause disease and famine.
If all the seahorses died the crabs, tuna, and penguins would have to find another source of food.
The consumers would die of starvation.
we would die, too
The community would get all the memories
The community would get all the memories