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Showing: 61 - 70 of 319 Results

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

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

Pollinators

August 12, 2024

Pollination services from honey bees and other insects provide the backbone to ensuring our diets are diverse and plentiful with fruits, nuts, and vegetables. In all, there are over 100 crops grown in the United States that depend on pollination. USDA supports the critical role pollinators play in...

Protecting Pollinators from A New Threat – First-Ever U.S. Sightings of Asian Giant Hornet

June 19, 2020 Elizabeth Hill, USDA Pollinator Coordinator, Office of the Chief Scientist and Anne Lebrun, National Policy Manager, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

It’s not the first time that European honey bees and other pollinators in the United States have encountered invasive pests, with the parasitic Varroa mite being the most noteworthy. For years, researchers and beekeepers have wondered what the next invasive pest of concern would be. Perhaps...

Animals Research and Science

Buzzing into Action to Support Pollinator Health through Research

May 27, 2015 Dr. Ann M. Bartuska, Deputy Under Secretary for Research, Education and Economics

As an ecosystem ecologist working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, pollinators are near and dear to me. Not only are they vital to agricultural production, providing billions of dollars in pollination services for the fruits, nuts and vegetables that contribute to a healthy diet, they are...

Conservation Animals Plants

See Honeybees at Work: USDA Launches BeeWatch

May 15, 2014 Annie Ceccarini, Program Manager, The People’s Garden Initiative

At the ribbon cutting of the USDA Headquarters People’s Garden in April 2010 plans were already in place to install a beehive on the roof of the Whitten Building as well as a "bee-cam" so anyone anywhere could learn about bee activity. USDA’s newest ‘buzzing’ residents were welcomed on Earth Day but...

Initiatives

USDA Talks Honeybees on Twitter

August 19, 2013 Sonny Ramaswamy, Director, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Last week’s cover of TIME magazine featured a story about the rapid rate of decline of honeybee populations across the globe. The article focuses on the question of the price we’ll pay if we don’t figure out what is killing the honeybee. A daunting thought when you think about the fact that one...

Conservation

#GimmeFive Ways to Boost Your Garden and Keep Pollinators Buzzing

April 06, 2015 Annie Ceccarini, The People’s Garden Initiative and USDA Farmers Market

The USDA’s People’s Garden team is joining the fun at the White House Easter Egg Roll today to introduce the crowds to some very important garden workers – pollinators. Bees, butterflies, bats, birds, and beetles are all crucial to sustaining plant growth, and in fact nearly two-thirds of the foods...

Initiatives

Deal Gives Back

June 11, 2015 Meryl Harrell, Senior Advisor to the Under Secretary

Here at USDA, we believe in the power of community to make a difference. So when Alice Deal Middle School in Washington, DC, reached out to the USDA Center for Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships to come visit for their annual day of service, we were eager to welcome over 100 seventh graders...

Conservation Initiatives