View allAll Photos Tagged pollinator

Photo credit: Lishka Arata/Point Blue

 

date take: Friday, October 29, 2021

 

story: Isaiah gave Erika a tour of one of our sites were we helped to establish a pollinator hedgerow because Erika had never seen one before and this is one of the conservation practices she will be including in her study to document how much Carbon is stored in the soil at various ages with various conservation practices. It was a beautiful morning and a fun, collaborative time!

 

staff featured: Erika Foster, Soil Ecologist and Isaiah Thalmayer, Senior STRAW Project manager

 

location: Blake's Landing, a Strauss Family property and STRAW restoration site that borders Tomales Bay

The pollinator garden's first autumnal blooms, along with the granite and iron balustrade -- once a poolside railing, now a lovely garden fence!

photo: Sara Dowse

Pollination Haiku

by C J Gregory

 

Bumble bee dances

Anthers on filaments sway

Stigma gets pollen

Pollinators enjoying milkweed in Delaware County Ohio. Mark DeBrock photographer, USDA-NRCS.

These seductive flowers trick bees, get pollinated and give nothing in return.

Eastern Tiger Swallowtail

Flower from my living room, please comment :)

Butterfly at Sandhill Horticultural Gardens.

Pinehurst, NC.

My lovely new purple passion vine is getting a lot of attention.

"If bees disappear from the Earth, humanity will have only four years of existence. Bees Without no pollination, no reproduction of Flora, Flora without no animals, no animals there will be no human race." - Albert Einstein

 

Photo: Yuri Borba | Bee picking nectar and pollinating the same time.

Hunter Project Soul ™ © | Series LIFE.

Published in National Geographic International.

 

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"Se as Abelhas desaparecem da face da Terra, a Humanidade terá apenas mais quatro anos de existência. Sem as Abelhas não há polinização, não há reprodução da Flora, sem Flora não há animais, sem animais não haverá raça humana". - Albert Einstein

 

Foto: Yuri Borba | Abelha captando o néctar e polinizando ao mesmo tempo.

Projeto Caçador de Almas ™© | Série VIDA.

Published in National Geographic Internacional.

A bee collects nectar from the flowers of a Pickerelweed (Pontederia cordata) at Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge in Concord, MA.

 

www.zacharycava.net

Honey bee on Helenium flower.

Wightwick Gardens, Wolverhampton.

 

Insectiflora pics: www.flickr.com/photos/191876035@N02/albums/72177720309176654

 

- image © Phil Brandon Hunter - www.philbhu.com - image ref: P7280595a2

Milkweed provides food for the Monarch butterfly, it also supports other pollinators such as honey bees that are vital to agriculture. Milkweed also provides homes for beneficial insects that control the spread of destructive insects. Dianne Johnson photographer, USDA photo

taken from my backporch. the willow tree has started budding for spring and thus attracts bees

Noble Woods Park, Oregon

Bees & butterflies rejoice! Our crews & volunteers plant water-wise pollinator plants on Dolores median @ Market.

Hover fly on a false dandelion

Cover crop with pollinator in Gallatin County, MT. August 2010.

one of the many bees pollinating my cucumber flowers. i understand the ancient animism beliefs now. the magic of transforming a seed to a fruit is powerful stuff, with little bees and bumble bees and wasps as the wizards that make it happen. maybe i should build a shrine...

The honey bees are hard at work pollinating the water lilly flowers. MG_5001 08-25-11

A little bee pigs out on nectar and collects pollen from some pink flowers

Pollinating honey bee on thistle flower.

Brittni Wood's first solo show at the Jane Gray Gallery in Jacksonville

A few hives working hard at pollinating a field of blueberries

Unidentifed insect pollinating a Boulder Raspberry (Oreobatus deliciosus) on the Sugarloaf Trail West of Boulder, Colorado. I was thinking this was some sort of Beetle but after trying to ID it I'm not so sure.

 

This is the new fireplace room exhibit! Completed in March, 2013.

Pollinator Planets. Two hanging baskets tied together. Filled with Bits of Ben's fur, twigs, hose pipe, ivy, old bark, fluff from the tumble drier, small branches and moss. I am really pleased with it.

Brittni Wood's first solo show at the Jane Gray Gallery in Jacksonville

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