eric: turn on a light, collect the insects that turn up, and send the results to radboud university.e numbers going down? paul: the moths about 60%, beetles by about 70%, and those figures are comparable with those in krefeld. that is kind of catastrophe, yes. i think so. that's happening here also. and i saw a study, i saw a study this afternoon that in denmark there was a study published with windscreens and counting hits in 20 years, and also they had also the same thing. eric: so, it's true about windscreens, there are less bugs hitting windscreens. paul: yes, and it's all over the world, more or less. and it'll be in australia also, i think, because you have farmers there too. eric: yeah. eric: the problem is we don't really know what's happening in australia, let alone most of the rest of the world. eric: they've been counting insects for more than 20 years, but there just aren't enough projects like this internationally. the world has grown rather complacent since the last warning of insectageddon nearly 60 years ago. eric: in 196 a ldlife biologist, rachel carson, wrote a glo