The USDA Forest Service, along with Pollinator Partnership, has produced a booklet called Bee Basics: An Introduction to our Native Bees to educate the public and encourage people to help protect these essential insects.
The 40-page booklet primarily focuses on bees native to North America, of which there are 4,000 species, found in forests, farms, cities, wildlands and deserts. Although honey bees may be most noted for producing honey, the booklet explains that native bees are valued for pollinating plants.
“Much of the produce we eat is pollinated by bees,” said Larry Stritch, a USDA Forest Service National Botanist. “They pollinate about 75 percent of the fruits and vegetables grown in the (United States) and 80 percent of flowering plants. Take away bees and you greatly decrease our food source and food for animals.”
According to “Bee Basics,” ground nesting bees provide food to wildlife and aerate and enrich soil.
The North American bumble bee, characterized by their relatively large, black, furry bodies and bright stripes, may be most familiar to Americans. There are about 50 species of bumble bees, which are important pollinators of tomatoes and clovers, a forage crop for cattle.
Bumble bees are among the Apidae family of bees, which also include native carpenter, squash and cuckoo bees, and nonnative stingless, orchid and honey bees.
Honey bees are the only natural source of honey that’s healthy for humans. Brought to America from Europe, honey bees don’t pollinate native plants as effectively as native bees.
Along with information about a variety of bees, “Bee Basics” also contains pages of glossy, color illustrations of bees and plants. The booklet’s key message warns of the threat to native-bee survival that is posed by pesticides, competition for nectar from honey bees, and environmental destruction.
To learn more about native bees, read “Bee Basics” on the Forest Service website.
Friday, August 5, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Hello Debi,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the wonderful information regarding native bees. The work of these insects is incomparable. I recently did some research and found some astounding figures that put a monetary value on their work. According to The Washington State Beekeepers Association, an estimated 200,000 bee colonies are responsible for pollinating $2,213,597,000 in produce annually. These insect are our friends and definitely carry their weight within agriculture.