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.
by daoboy
3 subcomments
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.
by dnnddidiej
4 subcomments
Trigger warning: animated insect crawls on screen.
by mapmeld
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I highly recommend one of the books cited in this article (Jeffrey A. Lockwood's Locust). He writes about hiking to the glacier to find preserved locusts, the formation of the Entomological Commission which discovered that existing anti-locust practices were ineffective, all sorts of details.
by jeremytarpley
2 subcomments
Great article. I'm also impressed by the design of the webpage itself. Love the typography and clever UI.
by swiftcoder
1 subcomments
> All of these triggers cause a release of serotonin. This serotonin release triggers the physical transformation
Locusts are just grasshoppers on prozac?
by card_zero
1 subcomments
Is it really true about the unpalatable chickens? Every mention of "caloptine" that I can find is from 1878, and derives from the annual Report of the United States entomological commission, which expressed hope of making commercial locust products, mainly formic acid. That entomological comission is the cited Charles Riley. Nobody ever seems to mention the substance again.
by alserio
1 subcomments
Nice Easter egg
by archermarks
0 subcomment
Really interesting article! I knew about the phase polyphenism but the forced cannibalistic march theory was new to me.