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Treating bees like livestock can benefit any agricultural system | Morning Ag Clips
Treating bees like livestock can benefit any agricultural system | Morning Ag Clips
“Bees in particular are the most productive pollinators, serving as a key player in the food chain,” says Brent Jones, head of GO SEED’s Iowa Research Farm. “Yet in the last couple of decades, the bee population has significantly suffered, directly threatening global food production.” According to the USDA, this decline is largely due to Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), resulting in colonies abandoning immature bees and food supply. A wide range of factors such as diseases, nutritional deficits, habitat loss and climate variability has been attributed to this. The intensification of agricultural production leading to the decline of crop diversity has also been attributed to CCD.
·morningagclips.com·
Treating bees like livestock can benefit any agricultural system | Morning Ag Clips
The PHiLL Project: Creating Pollinator Habitat in Log Landings - Northern Research Station
The PHiLL Project: Creating Pollinator Habitat in Log Landings - Northern Research Station
Bees play a critical role in ecosystem health and sustainability across the globe. They pollinate flowers, trees and other plants that in turn provide food and habitat for other creatures. Their role in pollinating agricultural crops is invaluable. But recently scientists have observed that many pollinating species, including wild bees, are declining in range or abundance and the Midwest United States has among the lowest predicted bee abundance.
·nrs.fs.fed.us·
The PHiLL Project: Creating Pollinator Habitat in Log Landings - Northern Research Station