Module 4
Module 4- Background
- Activity A
(time varies with size & age of group)
"Who Am I" Game: Reviewing Characteristics of Bees & Butterflies
(25-30 min)
- Activity B (1-2 hours)
Native Pollinators and Their Habitat: A Guided Field Trip
Pollinator Friendly Habitat in Your Area
Purpose:
- To understand the habitat requirements of native pollinators.
-
To become familiar with native pollinators and the native and introduced
plants they pollinate.
- To learn the areas in the community that are suitable habitat
for pollinators and what is being done to preserve or improve
them.
- To consider ways to raise public awareness of the importance
of pollinators and the need to protect their environment.
- To learn how to conduct a survey or a census.
Background:
Importance of Pollinator-Friendly Habitat
Pollinators, like other animals, require food, shelter and water,
space, a place to reproduce, and materials for nesting in order to survive
and flourish. These needs are usually met for native pollinators when
the natural environment is not disturbed.

Black swallowtail larva feed on dill-family plants.
Photo by Suzanne DeJohn/NGA.
Pollinators play an important role in maintaining the balance and biodiversity
necessary for a healthy ecosystem. There has been a global decline
in biodiversity due to habitat loss, introduced species, pollution, population
growth, and the overconsumption of resources. By applying sound ecological
principles to our use of land and water, we can help to reverse this
loss of biodiversity while making a healthier environment for all,
including
the animals that provide the essential eco-service of pollination.
(From Saving Pollinators; see reference list at bottom of page.)
The following community services or organizations may be able to direct
you to local groups or individuals that are knowledgeable about native
plants and pollinators:
- Cooperative Extension Service (See listing in County Government pages
in phone book.)
- Reference librarian at local library
- Local chapter of your state's native plant society (Do an Internet
search by entering your state's name followed by "Native Plant Society.")
- Local plant nurseries
- The botany or biology department at your local high school or college
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Decline in the Pollinator Population

Monarch butterfly larvae feed only on
milkweed
plants.
Photos by Suzanne DeJohn/NGA.
Four reasons for the alarming decline in the pollinator population are:
1. Habitat
loss and fragmentation. Habitat loss and fragmentation affect
pollinators in two ways:
- Pollinators have basic food requirements. The availability of
a variety of native plants is important because not all pollinators
can access
the nectar found in introduced flowers. Pollinators also depend on
the availability of various flowering plants throughout a season.
Habitat
loss can negatively affect the timing and amount of food availability,
thereby increasing competition for those limited resources.
- Loss of habitat can also disrupt the nesting requirements of certain
pollinators. For example many species of bees nest in underground
burrows and in hollowed-out logs. Decreases in suitable nesting areas
can be
attributed to natural disasters, such as fire, drought, or floods,
and to the development of land for human use.
While habitat loss can seriously impact all pollinator organisms, increased
fragmentation of habitats is particularly troublesome for those pollinators
that travel great distances. Fragmentation of habitat increases the
distance between suitable food and shelter sites along migratory
routes, thereby
disrupting the journey. Migratory pollinators, such as the monarch
butterfly and the rufous hummingbird, travel thousands of miles each
year as the
season change. These trips require high levels of energy, making
consistent food resources all along the way critical to survival. Some
scientists
believe that if fragmentation continues at its current rate, many
migratory corridors will soon be closed.
2. Agricultural and grazing
practices. Modern agricultural practices have
made farms an increasingly poor habitat for wild pollinators. Single-crop
farming has led to the elimination of fencing between smaller
fields. Such fencing created buffer strips where native flowering
plants could
grow, providing suitable habitat for the native pollinator population.
Removal of these buffer strips has a destabilizing effect on native pollinator
habitat. At the same time, the use of hybrid crop seeds that require
increased pollination make the farmer more dependent on costly
managed honey bee
colonies.
Use of land for grazing can result in diminished pollinator food
resources and destruction of underground nests and potential nesting
sites. Ironically, grazing
animals are dependent on insect-pollinated legumes, such as alfalfa and clover,
for forage.
3. Pesticides. Agricultural and residential use of broad-spectrum
pesticides poses another major threat to all pollinators. Insecticides
affect bees
and other insect pollinators directly through unintentional poisonings,
and herbicides affect them indirectly through destruction of insect forage
and other wildflowers important in maintaining some insect populations.
4. Introduced species. Introduced species of plants and
animals can have a serious effect on their new ecological system.
Introduced
pollinators
can increase competition for floral resources, disrupt the reproduction
of native plant species and facilitate the spread of invasive plants.
Despite the negative impact they may have, some non-native pollinators
also can be beneficial, the honey bee being an example. (From Ecological
Society of America's Pollinator Tool Kit: Pollinators in Decline;
see references below.)
References:
Buchmann, S.L. & Nabhan, G.P. (1999). Pollinators, Flowers, and
Garden Ecology. Brochure for Contra Costa Clean Water Program and the
Aquatic Outreach Institute. Life Garden, Walnut Creek, CA.
Butterfly World, Regional Garden Guidebook, Area 2. Bring Back the Butterflies
Campaign
Emblidge, A and Schuster, E. (1999). Saving Pollinators. ZooGoer, Jan/Feb.
http://natzoo.si.edu/Publications/ZooGoer/1999/1/savingpollinators.cfm
Shepherd, M. Backyard Conservation: Plants for Native Bees. The Xerces
Society
The Ecological Society of America. Pollinators in Decline--Causes. Pollination
Tool Kit. http://www.esa.org/ecoservices/poll/body.poll.scie.decl.html >> next
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