Diario del proyecto World Bee Day/Week 2024

16 de mayo de 2024

It is bigger than that

Global food production and agricultural economies rely critically on the role of pollinators. A significant amount of the global food supply from crops, providing human essential critical nutrients, is pollinator dependent. Successful pollination and fruit set for many fruit, vegetable, and nuts rely on pollinators. There are non-food products derived from plant sources such as fibers, dyes, and medicines that are pollinator-dependent and their diversity is pollinator driven. With an estimated 200,000 to 350,000 pollinator species, the value of their services is estimated to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars of annual agricultural output worldwide. Conservation of pollinators directly correlates with the assurance of food security, enhancement of dietary variety, and improvement of public health results. Through the protection of pollinator populations and the encouragement of sustainable agricultural methods and strengthen agricultural productivity , we can bolster food security, advance nutritional outcomes, and diminish the threat of malnutrition and food insecurity, and perpetuate rural means of living.

It goes beyond that when one considers the critical health and resilience of ecosystems through water purification, soil stabilization, and carbon sequestration is provided for by pollinator-dependent services.

The conservation of pollinators is closely aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), particularly goals related to zero hunger, good health and well-being, climate action, life on land, and partnerships for the goals. By prioritizing pollinator conservation within broader development agendas, governments can contribute to achieving multiple SDGs simultaneously, fostering synergies between environmental conservation, poverty alleviation, and social equity.

Publicado el 16 de mayo de 2024 a las 08:06 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 3 comentarios | Deja un comentario

14 de mayo de 2024

It is the little things that matter

The conservation of pollinators underscores broader ethical considerations regarding humanity's connection with nature. Pollinators are sentient beings capable of experiencing pleasure, pain, and suffering and, they merit ethical regard and empathetic care. Prioritizing pollinator conservation upholds environmental ethics, fosters reverence for non-human existence, and nurtures a balanced coexistence between humans and the wider ecosystem.

When valuing the intrinsic significance of the natural world, conserving pollinators becomes imperative for biodiversity, ecosystem integrity, and acknowledging the interconnectedness of species. Acknowledging the deep value of pollinator species and their ecological functions enhances our understanding of the planet's beauty, intricacy, and variety, motivating a shared dedication to safeguard and preserve the environment for generations to come.

We are a little over 2 days away from the start of the blitz. Remember to take time and observe and encourage others to join. https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/world-bee-day-week-2024
MAY 17, 2024 - MAY 23, 2024

Publicado el 14 de mayo de 2024 a las 04:03 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 2 comentarios | Deja un comentario

07 de mayo de 2024

Let's put the conservation of pollinators at the forefront of our efforts

The stability and resilience of ecosystems is contributed to by pollinators enhancing plant reproduction, promoting genetic diversity, and supporting ecosystem functions - the functions occur in ways such as nutrient cycling, soil formation, and carbon sequestration. Healthy populations of pollinators indicate healthy ecosystems that provide adequate resources, suitable habitat, and a balanced ecosystem. Conserving pollinator species and their habitats enhances ecosystem resilience to climate change, habitat degradation, and invasive species. Conservation can mitigate biodiversity loss and promote strategies of adaption befitting both pollinators and ecosystems.

Unique characteristics, behaviours, and evolutionary adaptions in each pollinator species make it valuable on its own merits. It is our responsibility to safeguard biodiversity and uphold a moral duty to preserve pollinator species and their habitats, acknowledging their intrinsic value and their role in enhancing the diversity of life on our planet.

Publicado el 07 de mayo de 2024 a las 09:06 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

04 de mayo de 2024

Let's share the acknowledgement of the challenges pollinators face

Relying on distinct floral resources, habitats, and nesting sites for survival, many pollinators are ecological niche specialists. The preservation and restoration of diverse habitats, such as urban green spaces, forests, wetlands, meadows, and grasslands is necessary for the conservation of pollinators. Protecting pollinator habitat can ensure entire ecosystems, conserve native fauna and flora, and maintain life sustaining ecological processes.

Environmental changes such as habitat loss and altered temperature and precipitation pattern can impact pollinators. Pollinator populations face unprecedented challenges as climate changes escalate. These challenges include habitat fragmentation, increased frequency of extreme weather events, and altered timing and cyclical patterns of plant and animal development (phenology).

Publicado el 04 de mayo de 2024 a las 03:02 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

27 de abril de 2024

Let's share the acknowledgement of pollinators

Pollinators serve as mutualistic partners in complex ecological networks with plants.These interactions serve as essential fundamental components to terrestrial ecosystem functioning by regulating wild plant reproduction, maintaining plant diversity, forming habitat and community dynamics, providing food for other wildlife, and by influencing the dispersal of species throughout landscapes.

We can also be thankful to the ground nesters for their role in bioturbation and bringing nitrogen and other elements into the ground.

Pollinators connect different trophic levels within food webs by serving the crucial role between plants and other organisms, including herbivores, predators, and decomposers. Preserving biodiversity, maintaining a balanced ecosystems, and supporting the resilience within natural habitats requires concerted efforts to conserve pollinators.

Please feel free to welcome others, that are in your circle of pollinator observers and identifiers, to this project . The more the merrier.

Publicado el 27 de abril de 2024 a las 05:03 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

22 de abril de 2024

I'm thinking about pollinators and its not just about bees.

World Bee Day/Week 2024 Bioblitz Project May 17, 2024 - May 23, 2024, please join.

To raise awareness of the importance of pollinators, the threats they face and their contribution to sustainable development, the UN designated 20 May as World Bee Day.

Many watch fascinated as bees collect pollen, butterflies flutter among flowers, or hummingbirds and sunbirds sip nectar. The graceful movements, vibrant colours, and intricate patterns of pollinators enhance inspiring natural landscapes. Aesthetic appreciation, relaxation, and recreation are evoked as they enrich outdoor spaces such as gardens, parks, and wild habitat.

It is not surprising that these movements, colours, and patterns have inspired the imagination of artists, poets, musicians, and storytellers. Pollinators serve as motifs in tapestries, paintings, sculptures, literature, and folklore. Bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds and sunbirds have symbolic meaning and spiritual significance throughout history for various cultures. Many ancient societies have a long association of bees with fertility, cooperation, and industriousness. Renewal, rebirth, transformation, beauty, and the soul's journey are symbolized by butterflies in diverse cultural traditions. Love, beauty, vitality, energy, and harmony are symbolized in many cultures by hummingbirds and sunbirds. Across cultures and generations greater appreciation, respect, and stewardship of the natural world can be fostered by recognizing and honouring the cultural significance of pollinators.

Being aware of pollinator ecology, behaviour, and biology helps to foster an understanding of the multi-faceted relationships that uphold life with a broader appreciation of the diversity and complexity of nature. Pollinator conservation helps to preserve the wonder and beauty of the natural world by maintaining spaces that promote profound relationships to nature and nurtures the soul.

Bees, butterflies, moths, birds, and bats are some of the pollinators comprising the essential elements of ecosystems worldwide. Their interaction with flowering plants ensure the survival of diverse species and maintains the intricate web of life in terrestrial and non-marine habitats. Pollination facilitation supports genetic diversity of plant populations, which is crucial for the resilience and persistence of ecosystems.

Publicado el 22 de abril de 2024 a las 03:30 AM por bobmcd bobmcd | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

02 de abril de 2024

World Bee Day/Week 2024 Bioblitz - Welcome to all interested to participate

To raise awareness of the importance of pollinators, the threats they face and their contribution to sustainable development, the UN designated 20 May as World Bee Day.

Pollinators visit flowers to drink plant nectar and/or eat and/or gather pollen and/or transport pollen as they move about. These actions can result in the fertilization of host plants. Bees in particular do this but so do other invertebrates such as butterflies, moths, beetles, flies, and wasps as well as vertebrates such as birds, bats, and small mammals.

Welcome to those interested to participate in the World Bee Day/Week 2024 bioblitz May 17, 2024 - May 23, 2024 and help raise awareness of this day. Last year during roughly this same time period 36,649 observers posted 151,832 qualifying observations as indicated in the World Bee Day/Week 2023 mockup project. 35766 observations were posted by the top 500 observers in 2023.

Pollinators play a vital role in maintaining biodiversity and the stability of ecosystems by facilitating flowering plant reproduction. Humans rely on the results of pollinator activity for many crops yielding food production including fruits, vegetables, and nuts, but also for the production of non-food products such as fibres, dyes, and medicines derived from plant sources. In contradiction, pollinator's stability is negatively impacted by human activity which lead to loss of habitat such as urbanization, agriculture, and land development. Agrochemicals, including pesticides and herbicides, impact pollinators by poisoning them, reducing forage, weaken immune systems, or disrupt navigation abilities. Changes in temperature, precipitation patterns, and plant phenology can disrupt pollinator and their floral resource synchronization. Human activity can introduce invasive species and their parasites and pathogens that may negatively impact native pollinators through competition and pathology.

Raising public awareness and comprehension regarding the importance of pollinators and the necessary steps for their conservation is vital for successful conservation endeavours.

Publicado el 02 de abril de 2024 a las 11:04 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 1 comentario | Deja un comentario

19 de marzo de 2024

Initial post for comments

Just posting this so comments can be added

Publicado el 19 de marzo de 2024 a las 06:53 PM por bobmcd bobmcd | 3 comentarios | Deja un comentario

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