Do you have a houseplant or garden plot that's not thriving as you'd expect?  

Attract Pollinators to Your Garden

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Pollinators are responsible for the survival of about 75 percent of the flowering plants and 75 percent of the crops around the globe. Without pollinators such as hummingbirds, bats, moths, bees, beetles, flies, and butterflies, life as we know it could not continue.

Threats to Pollinators

Sadly, pollinators face many threats. First of all, their habitats–the places they go to feed, rest, and reproduce–are being destroyed. As roadways, lawns, and crop fields replace natural areas with their native pollen and nectar plants, pollinators have fewer and fewer familiar places to go. For the pollinators who migrate seasonally the loss of habitat means they have to travel longer distances between resting places, making it harder for them to survive their already arduous trips.

Pesticides can be a problem if not used as directed. They are designed to kill pests, but they often kill plants and animals that aren’t pests. Pesticides are most effective when the sun has set and used as needed and directed.

Some pollinators face particular threats. Bats, for example, are dying from white-nose syndrome. More than one million hibernating bats have died from this fungal disease in the past three or four years. And the population of honey bees has declined nearly 50 percent in the last 50 years, at least in part because of mites and diseases.

The Pollinator-Friendly Garden

Gardeners can help pollinators survive by creating pollinator-friendly habitats in their own backyards.

You can make a few simple choices that will turn your garden into an oasis for pollinators.
Provide pollen and nectar sources throughout the growing season by planting flowers that bloom at different times of the year.

In addition to planting flowers that attract pollinators, you can take other steps to bring pollinators to your garden, such as:

  • Installing bat houses and bee nesting blocks.
  • Keeping a source of fresh water.
  • Keeping a patch of ground bare and undisturbed, preferably facing south.
  • Leaving a dead tree or limb in wooded areas as natural nesting spots.
  • Managed use of pesticides in and around the house.
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