<item>
  <date>2017-10-19</date>
  <hash>2862e3a05b8d25cd173bae604bfe1ed532ebac4e</hash>
  <images></images>
  <index>8</index>
  <keywords>
    <name>nature reserves</name>
    <index>1</index>
    <slug>/wiki/nature%20reserves</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords>
    <name>protected areas</name>
    <index>13</index>
    <slug>/wiki/protected%20areas</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords>
    <name>western Germany</name>
    <index>36</index>
    <slug>/wiki/western%20germany</slug>
  </keywords>
  <keywords_list>nature reserves</keywords_list>
  <keywords_list>protected areas</keywords_list>
  <keywords_list>western Germany</keywords_list>
  <keywords_main>Nature reserves</keywords_main>
  <slug>/feed/2017/10/19/scientists-studying-flying-insects-in-nature-reserves-and-protected-areas-of-western-germany-report-a-decline-of-more-th</slug>
  <sources>
    <name>PLOS One</name>
    <day>19</day>
    <hash>08e5ea0f59aece147d56c49845deaa1c45213cf4</hash>
    <month>10</month>
    <permalink>http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0185809</permalink>
    <year>2017</year>
  </sources>
  <sources>
    <name>The Atlantic</name>
    <day>19</day>
    <hash>7acd48a8c73a9c85b7b4e6b3b1b7d405a890b80a</hash>
    <month>10</month>
    <permalink>https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/10/oh-no/543390/</permalink>
    <year>2017</year>
  </sources>
  <text>Scientists studying flying insects in nature reserves and protected areas of western Germany report a decline of more than 75% of the population in about three decades. </text>
</item>
