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A majority of flowering plants, deprived of their pollinators, would cease to reproduce.
Birds, reptiles and mammals, denied the foliage, fruits and insect prey on which they feed, would follow the plants into oblivion.
The soil would remain largely unturned because insects, not earthworms as generally supposed, are the principal renewers of the soil.
A decline in soil quality would herald the end of wind-pollinated grasses and eventually the trees. Before long, human populations would experience widespread starvation and quickly vanish from the scene.
Their small stature may prevent insects from being recognized as masters of the planet. But their importance and durability are beyond dispute.
Insects witnessed the rise and fall of the dinosaurs. They have survived at least four major cataclysms that resulted in planet-wide extinctions. They continue to thrive despite mankind's best efforts at eradication. And they will very likely out-survive us.
Ours is a symbiotic relationship, but a skewed one. We need the insects. They don't need us. That leads to an odd and humbling thought:
Just who is bugging whom?
Source: Spiritual Wealth