Wildlife thrive in habitat or cover that includes
food, water, places to reproduce, hide from predators, and plenty of space.
Much of the habitat for bees and insect pollinators has been altered for use in
industrial agriculture, urban and suburban lawns, and paved parking areas and
roads. Dr. Marla Spivak of the University of Minnesota Bee Lab and Eric Mader
of the Xerces Society spoke recently about pollinator reversing habitat loss.
See http://www.minnpost.com/earth-journal/2014/12/keys-saving-our-endangered-bees-may-be-just-lying-along-roadside.
They explained that loss of habitat is one of the three important drivers of
Colony Collapse Disorder that continues to reduce managed honey bee colonies.
The other two are the widespread use of neonicotinoid insecticides and
increased virulence of some honey bee parasites, including the Varroa mite, and
some fungal infections. Dr. Spivak explained that there has been much
discussion involving banning the neonicotinoid insecticides to help the
insects, however, she explained that they need “not just habitat but clean,
uncontaminated habitat.” To maintain a robust agriculture she stated that “we
need to try for a world with both pesticides and pollinators.” Industrial
agriculture, involving vast acreage of cropland, offers little food for bees,
poisons insects indiscriminately, and destroys their ground nests. Planting
borders and untillable farm acreage in flowering, low-maintenance, native
perennial plants were given as sources of food for bees and game birds.
Planting milkweed can help monarch butterflies, and nitrogen-fixing clover
cover crops improve soil fertility. Dr. Spivak’s University of Minnesota Bee
Lab will be studying the effects of planting “bee lawns.”
Dr. Spivak
and Mr. Mader suggested that a solution to the loss of bee habitat could be conversion
of mowed and sprayed areas along the nation’s highways into bee corridors. Corridors
connect our pollinator gardens and pastures, making them much more effective
habitats. Planted with native wildflowers, these right-of-ways could well serve
our honey bees, native pollinators, birds, and small mammals. The future will
see an interest in moving to roadside vegetation management plans to support
our pollinators while beautifying our roadways.
--Richard
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