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POLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORG The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES Support Pollinators on Your Lands: Best Management Practices and Planting Guides for Roadsides, Utility Corridors, and Farms on Southern Ontario. Managed landscapes can offer critical pollinator support, especially if they are managed using techniques and practices that are known to support pollinators. This set of technical guidespresents
WWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA PROCLAMATION POLLINATOR WEEK JUNE 21-27, 2021 W H E R E AS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers inWWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
EXECUTIVE PROCLAMATION OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA WHEREAS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers inWWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
EXECUTIVE- TAT DEPARTMENT WHEREAS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers in producing much of our food supply; and, BEE BASICS - POLLINATOR Bee Basics: An Introduction to Our Native Bees By Beatriz Moisset, Ph.D. and Stephen Buchmann, Ph.D. Illustrations by Steve Buchanan A USDA Forest Service and Pollinator Partnership PublicationKG -BEAENT& COME
kg -Beaent& come: Created Date: 6/1/2021 1:36:14 PM HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORG The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES Support Pollinators on Your Lands: Best Management Practices and Planting Guides for Roadsides, Utility Corridors, and Farms on Southern Ontario. Managed landscapes can offer critical pollinator support, especially if they are managed using techniques and practices that are known to support pollinators. This set of technical guidespresents
WWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
EXECUTIVE PROCLAMATION OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA WHEREAS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers inWWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA PROCLAMATION POLLINATOR WEEK JUNE 21-27, 2021 W H E R E AS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers inWWW.POLLINATOR.ORG
EXECUTIVE- TAT DEPARTMENT WHEREAS, pollinator species such as birds and insects are essential partners of farmers and ranchers in producing much of our food supply; and, BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Title: Bee Identification Guide Author: EPRI Subject: 3002022284 Created Date: 6/1/2021 3:16:07 PM BEE BASICS - POLLINATOR Bee Basics: An Introduction to Our Native Bees By Beatriz Moisset, Ph.D. and Stephen Buchmann, Ph.D. Illustrations by Steve Buchanan A USDA Forest Service and Pollinator Partnership PublicationKG -BEAENT& COME
kg -Beaent& come: Created Date: 6/1/2021 1:36:14 PM HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. SELECTING PLANTS FOR POLLINATORS 6 Selecting Plants for Pollinators Understanding the Black Hills Coniferous Forest Photo courtesy of Willard n The Black Hills Coniferous Forest ecoregion falls in the middle of the Great Plains - FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. SELECTING PLANTS FOR POLLINATORS 6 Selecting Plants for Pollinators Understanding the Black Hills Coniferous Forest Photo courtesy of Willard n The Black Hills Coniferous Forest ecoregion falls in the middle of the Great Plains - FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORG The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.PROJECT WINGSPAN
Project Wingspan (PW) is a three-year landscape-scale project supported by grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to the non-profit the Pollinator Partnership. Pollinator Partnership is working with a coalition of partners and dedicated volunteers to increase the quality, quantity, and connectivity of pollinator habitat across the Midwest and Great Lakes Region to support BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES Support Pollinators on Your Lands: Best Management Practices and Planting Guides for Roadsides, Utility Corridors, and Farms on Southern Ontario. Managed landscapes can offer critical pollinator support, especially if they are managed using techniques and practices that are known to support pollinators. This set of technical guidespresents
BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Title: Bee Identification Guide Author: EPRI Subject: 3002022284 Created Date: 6/1/2021 3:16:07 PMGARDEN SIGNS
Send us a photo of the sign in your garden to info@pollinator.org. We may even send you a free poster if we use your photo! Print instructions: Suggested dimensions are 12 inches x 18 inches. Print on aluminum and stake in ground or affix to post, siding, etc. Print instructions: Suggested dimensions are 12 inches x 18 inches. Print onaluminum
CREATING URBAN POLLINATOR HOT SPOTS A flower box is a simple but effective way to bring pollinator friendly plants to your neighborhood and create an urban pollinator hot spot. Flower boxes can be set up in any climate and location, from the ground floor of your home all the way up to your 15 th floor apartment. All you need to do is secure a box outside your window, addsome
BEE BASICS - POLLINATOR Bee Basics: An Introduction to Our Native Bees By Beatriz Moisset, Ph.D. and Stephen Buchmann, Ph.D. Illustrations by Steve Buchanan A USDA Forest Service and Pollinator Partnership Publication WHERE DO POLLINATORS GO IN THE WINTER BLOG Pollinators, such as bees, butterflies, and birds all display a variety of amazing and unique strategies in order to survive the cold weather and overcome the harsh climate of the approaching winter. Honey Bee, Anthony Colangelo. As the winter temperatures start to freeze the air, honey bees form special clusters inside their hives tokeep warm.
HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. SELECTING PLANTS FOR POLLINATORS 6 Selecting Plants for Pollinators Understanding the Black Hills Coniferous Forest Photo courtesy of Willard n The Black Hills Coniferous Forest ecoregion falls in the middle of the Great Plains - FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
THE POLLINATION EQUATION The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. SELECTING PLANTS FOR POLLINATORS 6 Selecting Plants for Pollinators Understanding the Black Hills Coniferous Forest Photo courtesy of Willard n The Black Hills Coniferous Forest ecoregion falls in the middle of the Great Plains - FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORG The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.PROJECT WINGSPAN
Project Wingspan (PW) is a three-year landscape-scale project supported by grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to the non-profit the Pollinator Partnership. Pollinator Partnership is working with a coalition of partners and dedicated volunteers to increase the quality, quantity, and connectivity of pollinator habitat across the Midwest and Great Lakes Region to support BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES Support Pollinators on Your Lands: Best Management Practices and Planting Guides for Roadsides, Utility Corridors, and Farms on Southern Ontario. Managed landscapes can offer critical pollinator support, especially if they are managed using techniques and practices that are known to support pollinators. This set of technical guidespresents
BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Title: Bee Identification Guide Author: EPRI Subject: 3002022284 Created Date: 6/1/2021 3:16:07 PMGARDEN SIGNS
Send us a photo of the sign in your garden to info@pollinator.org. We may even send you a free poster if we use your photo! Print instructions: Suggested dimensions are 12 inches x 18 inches. Print on aluminum and stake in ground or affix to post, siding, etc. Print instructions: Suggested dimensions are 12 inches x 18 inches. Print onaluminum
CREATING URBAN POLLINATOR HOT SPOTS A flower box is a simple but effective way to bring pollinator friendly plants to your neighborhood and create an urban pollinator hot spot. Flower boxes can be set up in any climate and location, from the ground floor of your home all the way up to your 15 th floor apartment. All you need to do is secure a box outside your window, addsome
BEE BASICS - POLLINATOR Bee Basics: An Introduction to Our Native Bees By Beatriz Moisset, Ph.D. and Stephen Buchmann, Ph.D. Illustrations by Steve Buchanan A USDA Forest Service and Pollinator Partnership Publication WHERE DO POLLINATORS GO IN THE WINTER BLOG Pollinators, such as bees, butterflies, and birds all display a variety of amazing and unique strategies in order to survive the cold weather and overcome the harsh climate of the approaching winter. Honey Bee, Anthony Colangelo. As the winter temperatures start to freeze the air, honey bees form special clusters inside their hives tokeep warm.
HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.POLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.POSTER 2021
This year's poster “Pollinators and Agriculture: A Partnership on the Land" by artist Hugo Salais is an artistic depiction of the harmony that can be achieved when agricultural landscapes embrace pollinator-friendly management practices. Order yours today! Poster is36" W x 24" H.
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.POLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN.POSTER 2021
This year's poster “Pollinators and Agriculture: A Partnership on the Land" by artist Hugo Salais is an artistic depiction of the harmony that can be achieved when agricultural landscapes embrace pollinator-friendly management practices. Order yours today! Poster is36" W x 24" H.
INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch.PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Title: Bee Identification Guide Author: EPRI Subject: 3002022284 Created Date: 6/1/2021 3:16:07 PMPOLLINATOR PRAIRIE
These structures were known as "soddies." The grasses in prairies are wind pollinated while the wildflowers are pollinated by bees, beetles, flies, butterflies, moths and hummingbirds. The foliage, seeds, fruits and berries resulting from this pollination are fed upon byPROJECT WINGSPAN
Project Wingspan (PW) is a three-year landscape-scale project supported by grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to the non-profit the Pollinator Partnership. Pollinator Partnership is working with a coalition of partners and dedicated volunteers to increase the quality, quantity, and connectivity of pollinator habitat across the Midwest and Great Lakes Region to supportSEEDS AND PLANTS
Seeds and Plants for Pollinators! STOVER SEED - REGIONAL NATIVE POLLINATOR MIXTURES. In collaboration with Stover Seed, these REGIONAL - NATIVE - POLLINATOR WILDFLOWER MIXTURES are the environmentally healthy choice for supporting your local pollinators.. With no risk of introducing non-native or invasive plants into your local ecosystem, our mixtures promote the health of bees, butterfliesBEE ID BLOG
ID Characteristics: Black body with light or dark hairs. Carry pollen on hairs (scopa) present on hind legs. Body shape is similar to bumble bee, but abdomen is shiny with far fewer hairs. Face is round. 15-23mm. Nesting: Solitary, but several females may nest in the samepiece of wood.
FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. ARIZONA BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Arizona Bee Identification Guide Stephen L. Buchmann 31, Stacey Bealmear 2, Scott Prajzner , Vicki Wojcik 4 1 Department of Entomology, University of Arizona, HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
PROJECT WINGSPAN
Project Wingspan (PW) is a three-year landscape-scale project supported by grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to the non-profit the Pollinator Partnership. Pollinator Partnership is working with a coalition of partners and dedicated volunteers to increase the quality, quantity, and connectivity of pollinator habitat across the Midwest and Great Lakes Region to support NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORGWHO WE AREWHY POLLINATORSOUR PROGRAMSRESOURCESSTUFFJOIN US About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPOLLINATOR WEEK
Pollinator Week was initiated and is managed by Pollinator Partnership, and fourteen years ago the U.S. Senate’s unanimous approval and designation of a week in June as “National Pollinator Week” marked a necessary step toward addressing the urgent issue of declining pollinator populations. Pollinator Week has now grown intoan
PLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
POLLINATED FOODS
List of Pollinated Foods. BLUEBERRY: Over 115 kinds of bees, including bumblebees, mason bees, mining bees and leafcutter bees. DAIRY PRODUCTS: Diary cows eat ALFALFA pollinated by leafcutter and honey bees. RASPBERRY and BLACKBERRY: honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees,hover flies.
PROJECT WINGSPAN
Project Wingspan (PW) is a three-year landscape-scale project supported by grants from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to the non-profit the Pollinator Partnership. Pollinator Partnership is working with a coalition of partners and dedicated volunteers to increase the quality, quantity, and connectivity of pollinator habitat across the Midwest and Great Lakes Region to support NAPPC | POLLINATOR.ORG NAPPC parent organization, the Pollinator Partnership, has signed 11 major working pollinator-protection agreements with federal government agencies responsible for more than 1.5 billion acres of federally managed-influenced land. NAPPC partners created input and the Pollinator Partnership delivered ideas to ensure that the 2008 FarmBill
BEST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES BEE FRIENDLY FARMING The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: Bee Friendly Farming CERTIFIED, Bee Friendly Farming PARTNER, and Bee Friendly Farming GARDEN. INSIGHT CITIZEN SCIENCE APP The Pollinator Partnership is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization and the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection andpromotion of
CREATING A POLLINATOR GARDEN! Step 4. Mulching Mulching is a great way to discourage weeds.First, place a 3-ply layer of wet newspaper on the ground around plants (The newspaper is optional, but acts as an extra biodegradable barrier against weeds.). Pile on a thick layer of mulch. Try tree removal companies for a source for mulch. HOMEPAGE | POLLINATOR.ORG About Pollinators. Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supplyPLANTING GUIDES
For help finding the right guide for you, please call 415-362-1137 or email info@pollinator.org. Starting on Page 16 of the planting guides you can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists andbring
EDUCATION | POLLINATOR.ORG Pollinator Live - Find a series of live interactive webcasts, satellite field trips, and web seminars about pollinators, gardening, and conservation. PollinatorLIVE is geared to grades 4 to 8. Discovery Education Pollination Idea - Butterflies Lesson Plans. Discovery Education Pollination Idea - BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Title: Bee Identification Guide Author: EPRI Subject: 3002022284 Created Date: 6/1/2021 3:16:07 PM POLLINATOR STEWARD CERTIFICATION Pollinator Partnership Pollinator Steward Certification A certification program for land managers, communities, and organizations. This unique certification program is offered only by Pollinator Partnership (P2), the largest non-profit organizationdedicated solely to
POSTER 2021
This year's poster “Pollinators and Agriculture: A Partnership on the Land" by artist Hugo Salais is an artistic depiction of the harmony that can be achieved when agricultural landscapes embrace pollinator-friendly management practices. Order yours today! Poster is36" W x 24" H.
PROJECT WINGSPAN SURVEY 1. If you entered a habitat area through the 2017-2018 Monarch Wings Across Eastern Broadleaf Forest survey or the 2019 Project Wingspan survey, Please Do Not Duplicate acreage entries here. (However, if you have added new acreage to the previously registered habitat, the new area can be entered here). 2. FOR YOUR NATIVE POLLINATOR GARDEN MIDWEST REGION Arrange plants with different seasonal blooms in your plot. Dig holes twice as large as each plant’s pot. 3 Plant! 1 Identify your garden spot: Find a 3’ x 6’ plot that gets 6+ hours of sun. ARIZONA BEE IDENTIFICATION GUIDE Arizona Bee Identification Guide Stephen L. Buchmann 31, Stacey Bealmear 2, Scott Prajzner , Vicki Wojcik 4 1 Department of Entomology, University of Arizona, POLLINATOR GARDENS AND HABITAT PROGRAM CURRICULUM AND Pollinator Partnership’s . Pollinator Gardens and Habitat Program . The BUZZ about P2’s Pollinator Gardening Program started in 2000 with the establishment of our first school garden at Charles Drew Elementary in Bayview/Hunter’s Point.__ POLLINATOR WEEK
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ORDER THE LATEST POLLINATOR POSTER Pollinators and Agriculture This year's poster “Pollinators and Agriculture: A Partnership on the Land" by artist Hugo Salais is an artistic depiction of the harmony that can be achieved when agricultural landscapes embrace pollinator-friendly management practices. Order yours now by clickingHERE !
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BEE FRIENDLY FARMINGGet Certified
The Bee Friendly Farming (BFF) programs recognize, engage, and support BFF participants and pollinators everywhere. The BFF program has three categories that allow for engagement with all participants in pollinator conservation while addressing their landscape goals: BEE FRIENDLY FARMING CERTIFIED, BEE FRIENDLY FARMING PARTNER, and BEE FRIENDLY FARMING GARDEN. Get certified as a bee friendly farmer byclicking HERE !
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ECOREGIONAL PLANTING GUIDES Plant for Pollinators Our ecoregional planting guides are tailored to specific areas of the United States and Canada. Click HERE to find out which ecoregion you live in and to get your free guide to plant for pollinators!*
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PROJECT WINGSPAN
Build Habitat for Monarchs Interested in monarch butterfly conservation? Volunteer and help plant for pollinators with Project Wingspan ! Project Wingspan seeks to increase monarch habitat and engage public land managers and private land stewards throughout the Midwest through a series of monarch habitat enhancement activities with the goal of establishing 10,000 acres of pollinator habitat. TO VOLUNTEER, FILL OUT THE ONLINE FORMHERE
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AboutPollinators
Birds, bats, bees, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals that pollinate plants are responsible for bringing us one out of every three bites of food. They also sustain our ecosystems and produce our natural resources by helping plants reproduce. Without the actions of pollinators agricultural economies, our food supply, and surrounding landscapes would collapse.Learn more.
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POLLINATOR PARTNERSHIP A non-profit 501(c)3 organization-- the largest in the world dedicated exclusively to the protection and promotion of pollinators and theirecosystems.
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