Without bees we're fucked.
Quite frequently I have to develop regulators and make them work properly, evaluate, diagnose, qualify, debug them, and so on.
You develop some gut feeling in doing that. After a couple of years, you begin to notice things even in parts of diagrams and the motion of numbers. That's quite helpful, especially in complex systems. It's not taking away the actual work of calculating and hard confirmation, but it helps to be quicker in finding root causes. I think many people here experience it similarly.
If I look at all the issues we have with our biosphere, all those small regulator systems that add up, watercycles, oceans, production and consumption of certain carbon-gases, rates of extinction, change of air streams and ice, change of land, change of surface color of the planet, change of the oceans, increasing reduction in forest areas, ...
All of those are small regulator systems. Each and every one of those has at least one significant problem more or less directly related to us.
When I look at all those graphs, numbers and the "big picture" and apply my "professional gut feeling"... So many signs of already runaway regulators. If it was my machine at work showing all those signs, I would probably press the red button and calmly leave the room.