How to save our bees, which help pollinate so many plants needed by so many animals (including humans you may know of)? One British study indicates it is our newest toxic threat, the widely dispersed neonicotinoids so beloved by industrial agriculture.
Posted by: atowhee | August 16, 2016
WELL BEE-ING
Posted in conservation, insect, research | Tags: bees, neonicotinoids
Categories
- Agate Lake
- ashland
- Baskett Slough NWR
- Bear Creek
- birding
- birds
- birdsong
- butterfly
- california
- carnivore
- Cascades
- Clark Creek Park
- Coast Range
- conservation
- corvids
- cranes
- Dipper
- ducks & geese
- ducks and geese
- eagles
- Ecuador
- Emigrant Lake
- Eurasian birds
- European birds
- finches
- fish
- flora
- global warming
- Hawaii birds
- Howard Prairie Lake
- hummingbird
- Icterids
- insect
- Klamath Basin
- mammals
- marin
- Marion County
- McMinnville
- migratory birds
- Mill Creek Wetlands
- Mount Ashland
- natural history
- nesting
- ocean birds
- oregon
- OREOGON
- ornithology history
- owl
- rails
- raptor
- rarities
- reptile
- research
- Rogue River
- Salem
- san francisco
- San JUan Islands
- shorebirds
- Siskiyous
- sparrows
- squirrels
- swallow
- Table Rock
- trees
- tropical birds
- tyrant flycatcher
- Uganda
- Uncategorized
- vagrants
- warblers
- Washington State
- Willamette Valley
- winter birds
- woodpeckers
- wren
- Yamhill County
Leave a Reply