What Happened to the Locusts?

(explosion-scratch.github.io)

45 points | by explosion-s 3 days ago

5 comments

  • password4321 59 minutes ago
    A nice weekend read that doesn't smell like AI but if you're short on time or interest:

    Though the locusts had a huge migratory range stretching all the way to the eastern seaboard, its reproductive range was only a handful of river valleys in Wyoming and Montana. Once plowed, irrigated and trampled by livestock the species had nowhere left to lay eggs.

  • daoboy 29 minutes ago
    My earliest introduction to locusts was as a biblical plague. These Sunday school lessons did not include pictures. I always imagined some twisted diminutive demonic swarm of insects, and was disappointed to finally discover they were just grasshoppers.
    • themgt 5 minutes ago
      > I always imagined some twisted diminutive demonic swarm of insects

      Behavioral ecologist Stephen Simpson has proposed the cannibalistic forced march hypothesis[36], that is, the forward motion of a locust swarm is essentially sustained by each individual’s imperative to avoid being eaten by the locust behind it: 1) Align their body axis with neighbors (parallel) to minimize the chances of a side-on attack and present their narrowest possible profile to the individual behind. 2) March forward to bite and feed on the abdomen of the locust immediately ahead.

      A billion crazed insects marching through eating all your crops while cannibalizing each other does seem relatively twisted and demonic.

  • alserio 49 minutes ago
    Nice Easter egg
    • kasperset 44 minutes ago
      I almost jumped. Nice touch to the article
      • jcgrillo 35 minutes ago
        For a split second I thought there was an actual bug on my phone. It was an excellent article too!