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pollinators


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

Cheers to Butterflies

May 08, 2013 Katie Sapp, Siuslaw National Forest, U.S. Forest Service

As the bartender drew pints of Silverspot India Pale Ale for the crush of people in the Pelican Pub and Brewery in Pacific City, Ore., recently, Michelle Dragoo, Siuslaw National Forest wildlife biologist, and Anne Walker, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, prepared to tell the story of the...

Conservation Forestry

Conservation from the Ground Up

October 17, 2012 Amelia Hines, NRCS Georgia

What do lawns, green roofs and electric bills have in common? If you ask Bob Snieckus, the answer is “energy.” Even though Snieckus stays busy as National Landscape Architect for USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), he is also committed to conserving energy and improving...

Conservation Initiatives

To Bee Keep or Not to Bee Keep

July 03, 2012 Mary Conley, Communications Director, USDA Research, Education and Economics

This week, representatives from USDA have been down on the National Mall, staffing hands-on exhibits about food safety, bioenergy and even bees. Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists have, for years, been studying Colony Collapse disorder (CCD), which has been attacking honey bee colonies...

Initiatives Research and Science

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

Bringing Back the Bees

January 26, 2012 Renae Anderson, NRCS Wisconsin

A recently awarded USDA Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) will fund research into bee-friendly seed mixes. A partnership made up of the Xerces Society, University of Wisconsin Center for Integrated Agriculture Systems and USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service in Wisconsin is working to...

Conservation

NRCS Helps Renovate the Landscape at Nicollet Tower and Interpretive Center Area

September 14, 2011 Kent Duerre and Colette Kessler, NRCS South Dakota

South Dakota is in the middle of the Great Plains, a vast prairie ecosystem stretching across much of North America that two hundred years ago was covered in native grasses and wildflowers. Today, visitors can get a glimpse of the prairie of the past, with the help of NRCS ’ Conservation Technical...

Conservation

USDA Science Lab Buzzing With “Sweet” Results

August 30, 2011 Dr. Robert Epstein, Deputy Administrator of AMS Science and Technology Programs

In an intense around-the-clock operation, more than 60,000 worker bees have churned out 30 pounds of raw honey from a USDA laboratory in Gastonia, N.C. The People’s Garden Initiative beehives are managed by the staff of National Science Laboratory (NSL), a part of the Agricultural Marketing Service...

Research and Science

USDA Forest Service Booklet Touts Value of Native Bees

August 04, 2011 Reggie Woodruff, Media Relations Officer, U.S. Forest Service

When I was a kid, there was one category for bees – “the stinging kind.” Fear of being stung wouldn’t allow me to consider variations among the swarms that patrolled playgrounds. The only thing that made bees tolerable was … the honey.

Forestry

National Pollinator Week Success Story: NRCS Helps Farmer Create Pollinator Habitat in Mississippi

June 21, 2011 Justin Fritscher, NRCS Mississippi

Along the lush banks of the Sunflower River, Steve Martens has a slice of paradise. The Madison, Miss. resident owns 1,600 acres of farmland and forests, hospitable not only to soybeans and corn, but also to whitetail deer and bobwhite quail.

Conservation
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