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Showing: 11 - 20 of 318 Results

Being Serious about Saving Bees

June 20, 2017 Dr. Ann Bartuska, Acting Chief Scientist and Acting Under Secretary for Research, Education, and Economics

Pollinators are a vital part of agricultural production. In the United States, more than one-third of all crop production – 90 crops ranging from nuts to berries to flowering vegetables - requires insect pollination. Managed honey bee colonies are our primary pollinators, adding at least $15 billion...

Animals Research and Science

USDA to Provide $4 million For Honey Bee Habitat

WASHINGTON, Oct.29, 2014 – Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today that more than $4 million in technical and financial assistance will be provided to help farmers and ranchers in the Midwest improve the health of honey bees, which play an important role in crop production. "The future of...

'Bee'ing at White House Day at the Lab

March 29, 2016 Jay Evans, Research Leader, Bee Research Lab, Agricultural Research Service

“Whoa! Do you have bees in there?” is not something the Secret Service asks every day, even of scientists when they come to the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, which sits next to the White House West Wing and houses most of the staff offices. It was just a month ago that agronomist Eton...

Research and Science

Changes in a Key Source of Honey Bee Nutrition

May 25, 2016 Dennis O'Brien, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

All this month we will be taking a look at what a changing climate means to Agriculture. The ten regional USDA Climate Hubs were established to synthesize and translate climate science and research into easily understood products and tools that land managers can use to make climate-informed...

Animals Plants Research and Science USDA Results

NIFA-Funded Research Aims to Keep Bees on the Job

July 17, 2018 Mary Purcell-Miramontes and Scott Elliott, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Bee populations in North America have been in decline since the 1940s. This is of great concern to the agriculture industry because about 75 percent of specialty crops depend on the services of pollinators – of which bees are the most economically important.

Research and Science

A Diet to Help Conserve Bees When Food Is Scarce

October 06, 2015 Kim Kaplan, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. The fact that honey bees are a critical link in pollinating plants, especially our crops, has become better known to the...

Research and Science

Pollinator Week Brings Focus on Honey Bee Health

June 16, 2015 Ruihong Guo, Agricultural Marketing Service Science and Technology Program Deputy Administrator

This post is part of the Science Tuesday feature series on the USDA blog. Check back each week as we showcase stories and news from USDA’s rich science and research portfolio. The buzz of a honey bee and the flutter of a butterfly bring happy thoughts of beautiful gardens. These pollinators are also...

Animals Plants Research and Science

High Five for Pollinators: Busy Bees, Bats and Butterflies

December 15, 2015 Sarah Haymaker, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Day and night, pollinators are at work all around us—and it's not just honey bees. Did you know that pollinators are responsible for one out of three bites of food we eat? If you'd like to learn more, we've pulled together five blogs from 2015 highlighting some surprising facts about these busy...

Conservation Forestry

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

Cattle and Honey Bees Graze in Harmony on Wisconsin Farm

October 15, 2015 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Wisconsin

Reed Fitton grazes cattle on the same hilltop farm where the late conservationist Ben Logan grew up and later featured in his memoir, “The Land Remembers.” Fitton carefully manages the farm near Gays Mills, Wisconsin with a broad conservation ethic, preventing soil erosion and protecting waterways...

Conservation