Imagine waking up to a breakfast table that looks perfectly normal—vibrant strawberries, golden almonds, and a steaming cup of coffee—yet beneath the surface, your meal is hollow. It looks like food, it tastes like food, but the vital vitamins and minerals your body craves are vanishing. This isn't a dystopian fiction; it is the reality of "Hidden Hunger." In May 2026, a groundbreaking study from the University of Bristol confirmed a terrifying link: the global decline of insects is not just an environmental crisis; it is a direct assault on the nutritional density of human food. Our pollinators are disappearing, and as they go, they are taking the life-sustaining essence of our diet with them. The Bristol Discovery: The May 2026 Breakthrough For decades, scientists warned that the loss of bees, hoverflies, and butterflies would lead to lower crop yields. We feared "empty shelves." However, the latest research published in May 2026 by the University of ...
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