The new edition of The Pollinator Garden Planning Deck is now available at your favorite bookseller!
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Pollinator Garden Planning Deck
  • Find plants of special interest to pollinators
  • Cover early, mid-season, and late blooming
  • Select for sun & shade, wet & dry conditions

Native, hand-collected perennial flower seeds • Pollinator plants for local pickup 

WHY should we plant pollinator habitat?

If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would have only four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.

Albert Einstein

From the press:

Monarch Butterflies in Western North America in Jeopardy

Population of monarchs overwintering in California at lowest level ever recorded (January 2019, excerpt)

PORTLAND, Ore.; Thursday, 1/17/19 — The population of monarch butterflies overwintering in California has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded. Surveys done by volunteers with the Western Monarch Thanksgiving Count found only 28,429 butterflies, an 85.2% fall from the previous year—and a 99.4% decline from the number of monarchs in the state in the 1980s. The results of the count were released Thursday by the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, along with a Western Monarch Call to Action.

“To picture what this means for monarchs, imagine that the population of Los Angeles had shrunk to that of the town of Monterey.”

Emma Pelton, a monarch conservation expert with the Xerces Society.

“To picture what this means for monarchs, imagine that the population of Los Angeles had shrunk to that of the town of Monterey,” said Emma Pelton, a monarch conservation expert with the Xerces Society.

Faced with these alarming numbers, Pelton has worked with monarch scientists at institutions across the West to develop the Western Monarch Call to Action, a five-point rapid-response action plan to rescue the western population of the monarch butterfly.

The most immediate priority in the coming weeks is to ensure monarchs have nectar to fuel their flight and milkweeds on which they can lay their eggs when they leave the overwintering sites. This is something that everyone in California can help with right now: plant early blooming native flowers and milkweed to restore breeding and migratory habitat. Monarchs will use plants growing in gardens, parks, along railroads, on farms and anywhere else they can find them.

“It’s easy to give up when faced with news like this,” said Pelton. “But doing nothing is not an option.”

Media Contacts:
Emma Pelton, Endangered Species Conservation Biologist; emma.pelton@xerces.org
Sarina Jepsen, Endangered Species Program Director; sarina.jepsen@xerces.org

“Our responsibility is to species, not to specimens; to communities, not to individuals.” —Sara Stein, Noah’s Garden

There is a worldwide phenomenon taking place, and it affects every element of life as we know it. Globally, across the United States, and throughout Massachusetts, pollinator species are in decline. The exact causes of the decline of each of the tens of thousands of species may still be indefinite, yet much is already understood: without pollinators, human life and all terrestrial ecosystems on earth would not survive. Pollination is not just fascinating natural history: it is an essential ecological function (U.S. Forest Service).

According to the National Academy of Sciences, close to three quarters of the flowering plants on earth rely on pollinators in order to reproduce. From these plants comes one-third of humankind’s food, and even greater proportions of food for wildlife.

Great Barrington Pollinator Action Plan (Massachusetts, Winter 2018, excerpt)
—Evan Abrasion, Elan Bills, Renee Ruhl

Letter to the White House from the Xerces Society, April 2014 (excerpt)

…We recognize that ongoing reports of honey bee decline are driving much of the interest in pollinators today. However, less well known but far more alarming, is the growing body of evidence suggesting that wild bees and other pollinators are faring even worse.

For example, a recent analysis conducted by researchers from across North America now reveals that one-third of the 46 bumble bee species found in the United States are at risk of extinction. Similarly, as the White House already knows, precipitous declines of the once ubiquitous and iconic monarch butterfly represent a shocking trend as the population dwindles to record lows….

While multiple and complex factors are likely driving the decline of our pollinators—including habitat alteration, pesticide use, parasites and diseases, and, perhaps, climate change—habitat restoration with native plants is a key strategy that can buffer bee populations against the multitude of threats that they face.

Scott Hoffman Black, Executive Director
The Xerces Society

Native Bees are Effective and Efficient Pollinators

Definition: What’s the difference between honeybees and native bees?
Did you know: Native bees are more effective than honeybees at pollinating flowers on a bee-per-bee basis.

The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation — xerces.com
Farming with Pollinators: Increasing Profit and Reducing Risk (2014, exerpt)