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Preserving that Beautiful Buzz

February 25, 2014 Kerry R. Smith, Laboratory Approval and Testing Division Director, AMS Science and Technology Program

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. In agriculture, buzzing can be music to our ears—especially if that buzz means pollinators are busy helping produce our...

Research and Science

Students Reduce Erosion on the Hoosier National Forest

September 25, 2013 Judi Perez, Hoosier National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

Streams will flow more freely and bees will have a new home on the Hoosier National Forest, thanks to the work of six young women from central Indiana. The women -- recent high school graduates from Bloomington High School North and South, a high school senior from Bedford, Ind., and an Indiana...

Forestry

South Carolina Conservation Partnership Buzzing About Pollinators

June 18, 2013 Amy Overstreet, NRCS South Carolina

Eighty-five percent of all flowering plants depend on pollinators, like bees and bats, to reproduce. But these critical pollinators are in trouble as habitat loss, disease, parasites and environmental contaminants are causing a decline of many species, including some of the more than 4,000 species...

Conservation

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

The Buzz at the Top of USDA’s Whitten Building

June 21, 2010

by Wayne Bogovich, The Peoples Garden Apiary Beekeeper Folks in the area are welcoming USDA’s newest residents, bees! The People’s Garden at USDA headquarters added a beehive in The People’s Garden Apiary which is located on the roof of USDA’s Whitten Building along the National Mall in Washington...

Initiatives

Why Not Keep Honeybees?

June 18, 2010 Kayla Harless, People’s Garden Intern

Did you know that less than one in ten thousand bees sting? Most of the stings that you and I have experienced are at the hands of wasps and hornets and their relatives; they are hunters that sting several times a day. Bees, however, only sting when they feel threatened and die shortly thereafter...

Initiatives

Pests and Their Natural Enemies: Learn to Protect Your Garden!

June 14, 2010

Written by Kayla Harless, People’s Garden Intern The People’s Garden workshops have yet to be anything less than an informative and fun time! Today, Don Weber, a research entomologist with USDA Agricultural Research Service’s Invasive Insect Biocontrol and Behavior Laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland...

Initiatives

What Kind of Bee Is That?

June 07, 2010

Written collaboratively by: The People’s Garden Team Today, Sam Droege with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) led a workshop on The Native Bees in Your Garden at The People’s Garden at USDA Headquarters. Did you know there are about 4,000 species of bees in North America and that one eighth of them...

Initiatives
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