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National Pollinator Week


It's Time to Talk about the Birds and the Bees -- and the Butterflies, Bats and Beetles

June 16, 2015 Ann Mills, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Natural Resources and the Environment and Jon Jarvis, National Park Service Director

Cross-posted from the Department of Interior blog: From birds and bees to butterflies, bats and beetles, pollinators are a diverse group and are critically important to terrestrial life on our planet. Without our help, however, their populations will continue to decline as a result of numerous...

Animals Plants

Conserving Monarch Butterflies and their Habitats

June 16, 2015 Carita Chan, U.S. Forest Service Research & Development

With more than 80 percent of the world’s flowering plants relying on pollinators, their importance to natural ecosystems and agriculture cannot be overstated. However, populations of pollinators, including bird, bat, butterfly, beetle and bee species, have been declining around the world...

Forestry

It's National Pollinator Week! Celebrate Bees, Bats and Other Pollinators on Friday, June 19, at USDA's Pollinator Festival

June 15, 2015 Annie Ceccarini, USDA Farmers Market Manager and The People’s Garden Initiative Manager

It’s National Pollinator Week, June 15-21! Join us on Friday, June 19, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., to learn about bees, birds, bats and other pollinating animals at the sixth annual Pollinator Festival outside USDA Headquarters along 12th Street in Washington, DC. More than 14 USDA agencies, other...

Initiatives Animals Plants

People's Garden in Illinois Provides Food, Sanctuary for Pollinators

June 20, 2014 Jody Christiansen, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Illinois

What’s the buzz going on in Princeton, Ill.? A food fest for our pollinator friends, that’s what. This is a People’s Garden designed specifically for pollinators such as bees, butterflies and hummingbirds. The idea came to Ellen Starr, area biologist with the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation...

Conservation Initiatives

Pollinator Protection: Conservation Helps Rare Butterfly

June 19, 2014 Elisa O'Halloran, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Every year, millions of tourists fly from central Mexico into the United States, first stopping in the deep American South and then continuing northward even into parts of southern Canada. How all of this is done without passports, customs agents or airplanes? This is the annual journey made by...

Conservation

It's National Pollinator Week: Bee with Us Friday for a Twitter Chat with Beekeepers & Join Us for the Fifth Pollinator Week Festival at USDA

June 18, 2014 Annie Ceccarini, Program Manager, The People’s Garden Initiative

How do pollinators affect your life? Well, if you’ve ever eaten a blueberry, chocolate bar or tomato, you can thank a pollinator. Pollinators are birds, bats, butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, wasps, small mammals, and most importantly, bees. They are responsible for pollinating one out of every...

Initiatives

Forest Service is Aflutter with Native Plant and Pollinator Gardens

June 17, 2013 Leah Anderson, Eastern Region, U.S. Forest Service

With a view of majestic mountains in the background, visitors to the Cranberry Mountain Nature Center of the Monongahela National Forest find themselves immersed in a bevy of beautiful plants in bloom and fluttering monarch butterflies. Beneath the natural grandeur, a very essential ecosystem...

Forestry

Buzz Over to the #PollinatorWeek Festival

June 14, 2013 Annie Ceccarini, Outreach and Education Specialist, The People’s Garden Initiative

How do pollinators affect your life? Well, if you’ve ever eaten a blueberry, chocolate bar or tomato, then you owe a big thank you to a small pollinator. Pollinators are birds, bats, butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, wasps, small mammals, and most importantly, bees. They are responsible for...

Initiatives

Why ‘Bee’ Concerned about Pollinators? They are the Little Things that Run the World!

June 22, 2012 Larry Stritch and Jane Knowlton, U.S. Forest Service

Every time you walk into your garden to enjoy a beautiful flower or pick a fruit, think about thanking a bee, butterfly or hummingbird. These and other kinds of animals are pollinators and the subject of USDA’s participation in the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign which celebrates...

Forestry

USDA Officials Plant a People’s Garden in Syracuse

June 28, 2010 Shelly C. Harlander, Public Information Coordinator Rural Development, New York

USDA Rural Development (RD), Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and Farm Service Agency (FSA) staff planted the first public “Peoples Garden” in New York State last week.

Initiatives
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