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#PollinatorWeek


Reversing Pollinator Decline is Key to Feeding the Future

June 24, 2016 Dr. Sonny Ramaswamy, Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Without pollinators, we don’t eat—it’s simple as that—and, at the moment, large numbers of pollinators are dying. With the world’s population projected to exceed 9 billion in just the next 30 years or so, that is not a good position for us to be in. More than 90 species of U.S. specialty crops...

Food and Nutrition

Hill Farm Buzzing with Pollinator Success

June 23, 2016 Elvis Cordova, Deputy Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs

Since it’s National Pollinator Week, it seemed fitting to express my thanks to farmers Scott and Susan Hill - who run the Hill Farm outside Charlottesville, VA. Earlier, I had the chance to visit their 10-acre property former tobacco farm to see firsthand how hard they are working to grow a variety...

Food and Nutrition Farming

Pollinator Week: Celebrating Blue Butterflies on the Great Lakes

June 21, 2016 Leah Anderson, U.S. Forest Service

In honor of National Pollinator Week, the U.S. Forest Service joins organizations and individuals across the world to celebrate pollinators and share ways to help them survive and thrive. Pollinators are vital to healthy ecosystems. Eighty percent of flowering plants require pollination by animals...

Forestry

Learn How to Bee a Friend during USDA's Pollinator Festival this Friday, June 24

June 20, 2016 Annie Ceccarini, Program Manager, The People's Garden Initiative

The best time to bee a friend to pollinators is now! Today is the first day of summer and the launch of National Pollinator Week, June 20-26. Around the globe, people are celebrating with events that emphasize the importance of pollinators and teach ways to save them. Here at USDA, we’ve issued the...

Initiatives

Updated USDA Program Enables Farmers and Ranchers to Help Monarch Butterflies

June 19, 2015 Justin Fritscher and Jocelyn Benjamin, Natural Resources Conservation Service

An update to one of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) key conservation programs will enable farmers and ranchers to aid the imperiled monarch butterfly. This year, NRCS updated its Conservation Stewardship Program to include incentives for farmers and ranchers who plant milkweed...

Conservation

Wisconsin: Pollinator Week Highlights Addition of Bee-Friendly Prairie Habitat

June 19, 2015 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin

James MacDonald owns 120 acres of rural land in Green County, Wisconsin. Through USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), James expanded relic prairie on his land, including planting 3 acres of native pollinator mix through EQIP financial...

Conservation

Wisconsin: Pollinator Week Highlights Buzzing Success of Local Beekeeper

June 18, 2015 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin

Pam Gasper, of Chaseburg, Wisconsin, has been a bee keeper for the past three years. She recently restored 2 acres on her property to include natural habitat for bees through USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). A dry summer and harsh...

Conservation

Celebrating a World of Benefits from a Dwindling Resource

June 18, 2015 Jocelyn Benjamin, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Tomorrow, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is joining the festivities at the sixth annual Pollinator Festival in honor of National Pollinator Week. Bees, butterflies, bats, birds, beetles and other animals play a critical role in the production of fruit or seeds, including plants...

Conservation

Protecting Pollinators through Habitat Conservation is Critical to Preserving Food Supply

June 17, 2015 Ashton Ebarb, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Earth Team Volunteer

“They’re in a happy mood today,” Jim Pratt, a local apiarist, said. At a comfortable 62 degrees, honeybees buzz with a clear objective: collect nectar and pollen, for honey and pollination. “Pollinators, like honeybees, support food crops,” Pratt said, explaining why for 20 years he’s raised...

Conservation

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
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