By Denise Coleman, USDA NRCS State Conservationist in Pennsylvania
The next time you snack on almonds, add blueberries to your smoothie or eat pumpkin pie, thank a pollinator and thank farmers, ranchers and private forestland owners who work hard to create and maintain their habitat.
Pollinators, such as honeybees, bumblebees, butterflies, birds, bats, flies and many others, play a critical role in crop production. Without pollinators, we wouldn’t have many crops.
During the week of June 22-28, the nation will celebrate these iconic and crucial pollinators during National Pollinator Week. This year’s theme is “Pollinators, Plants, People and Planet.”
Thirteen years ago, the U.S. Senate unanimously designated the third week in June as National Pollinator Week to increase awareness about the importance of pollinators and the challenges many of them face, including serious population declines and habitat losses, often due to land use changes and excessive or improper pesticide use. Nearly 200 species of pollinators are considered threatened or extinct.
Pollination occurs when pollen grains are moved between two flowers of the same species, or within a single flower by wind or insects and animals. Successful pollination results in healthy fruit and fertile seeds, allowing the plants to reproduce.
The extensive and critical world of crop pollinators is a $20 billion a year industry. About 75 percent of crop plants are pollinated by billions of animals and insects every year.
Many federal, state, and local government agencies, non-government organizations, and universities have launched extensive efforts to protect pollinators, especially honeybees and the Monarch butterfly.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) works closely with farmers, forest landowners and other private landowners to increase pollinator habitat in targeted areas nationwide.
The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), through USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), offers financial incentives to agricultural producers and private forest landowners who enhance pollinator habitat by voluntarily implementing conservation practices such as cover crops, wildflower and native plantings in buffers and areas not in production.
As owners and stewards of the land, many farmers and private forest landowners manage their natural resources to work to achieve their production goals, they are protecting the rich and diverse ecology on or near their operations.
When we protect pollinators, we protect our ability to grow food. We thank our farmers and private forest landowners who offer a safe haven for pollinators and grow the products we enjoy.
Whether you are a large commodity producer, a small and diverse organic producer or even a suburban homeowner, you can have an important role in saving pollinators in Pennsylvania.
You can help protect pollinators by doing the following:
-- Plant appropriate vegetation. Use conservation practices and create habitat that sustains and enhance pollinators on the farm, forest or the yard.
-- Use pesticides, herbicides and insecticides carefully on and off the farm, ranch and private forests. Keep your operation pollinator friendly.
-- Protect flowering plants and potential pollinator nesting sites such as areas of undisturbed ground and native vegetation.
Do your part to help protect pollinators. By taking action to diversify and beautify your operation or property, you could ensure that many fruits and vegetables are available and plentiful for future generations for many years to come.
Pollinator Guides
NRCS has landowner guides that provide helpful tips on protecting various types of pollinators, such as the monarch butterfly and rusty patched bumble bee, among others.
For more information about pollinators and what you can do in Pennsylvania, please contact your local USDA service center, or visit the NRCS- Pennsylvania webpage.
Related Articles:
National Pollinator Week June 22-28: Help Encourage Ecological Diversity In Your Own Backyard
Bay Journal Forum: Do You Like To Eat And Breathe? Thank A Pollinator
[Posted: June 22, 2020] PA Environment Digest
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