Released
: 6/20/2008 5:00:42 PM
National Pollinator Week 2008 was your chance to listen to a series of podcasts and learn more about the essential birds, bees, bats, and even beetles that pollinate your food and flowering plants, and make our wild areas beautiful and healthy.
From native bees in urban areas to climate change and pollinators, endangered pollinators and plants, and how to make your landscape more pollinator-friendly, these podcasts will give you the inside buzz on North America's pollinators.
The podcasts were produced for National Pollinator Week by the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign (NAPPC) and its federal partners in the Department of the Interior - Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Geological Survey. They ran from Monday, June 23 at http://www.pollinator.org/:
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Monday, June 23. The Pollinator Partnership: Bringing Together Pollinators and People.
An overview of pollinator issues, The Pollinator Partnership and Pollinator Week events, gardening guides for pollinators, educational curriculum and free posters and pollinator wheels.
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Tuesday, June 24. Endangered Butterflies and Plants.
Imperiled butterflies and plants as well as some of the challenges facing their recovery.
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Wednesday, June 25. Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Altitudes: Pollinators, Phenology, and Climate Change.
How climate change may be affecting pollinators and their phenology - the timing of their life-cycle events.
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Thursday, June 26. Busy Bees in the Beltway: Native Bees and Cities.
Focuses on specific studies of native bees in Capital-area national parks and reveals how natural areas in even urban environments contribute to the conservation of native bees.
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Friday, June 27.
Managing Mini-Fauna: Pollinators on Public Lands.
Steps land managers can take to start managing for pollinators.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published additional pollinator podcasts at http://www.fws.gov/pollinators.
Why the emphasis on pollinators? The National Academy of Sciences has reported
that not only is there direct evidence for decline of some pollinator
species in North America, but also very little is known about the status
and health of most of the world's native pollinators, whether they be beetles or bats, bees or birds, or flies and wasps. Additionally, the recent occurrence of Colony Collapse Disorder has negatively affected managed honey bees, alarming and puzzling the agricultural community and researchers.
As discreet as most pollinators are, their well-being is and always
has been necessary to people all across this planet. They are critical
to the life cycle of seed-bearing plants. Without them, the ability of
agricultural crops and wild plants to produce food products and seeds is
jeopardized. Over 75 percent of flowering plants rely on pollinators,
and they are responsible for an estimated $15 billion in services to
agriculture alone in the United States.
While the importance of a healthy pollinator population to
agriculture is clear, pollinators are just as important to sustaining
functioning ecosystems and the food supply for wildlife.
DOI has a special obligation to understand and improve the condition
of native pollinators on Federal lands. It manages about 500 million
acres - or one-fifth of the surface land of the United States, which
offers tremendous opportunities for the conservation of pollinators in
North America.
Department of the Interior bureaus are working to meet this
obligation. The Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service, Bureau
of Land Management, and the U.S. Geological Survey are active partners
with NAPPC. Three of these DOI bureaus manage millions of acres of
federal lands, while the other, USGS, has the scientific expertise to
help address pressing scientific questions.
NAPPC, which is managed by the Pollinator Partnership, includes more
than 120 partners throughout the United States, Mexico, and Canada, such
as government agencies, scientists, academics, farmers, ranchers, and
others. Their goal is to build strong public and private partnerships to
protect pollinators based on best practices and sound science. To learn
more about the Pollinator Partnership and to listen to the podcasts,
please visit http://www.pollinator.org.
USGS provides science for a changing world. For more information, visit www.usgs.gov.
Subscribe to USGS News Releases via our electronic mailing list or RSS feed.
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Links and contacts within this release are valid at the time of publication.