As National Pollinator Week kicks off today, you might ask yourself why a US Senate resolution would officially dedicate a whole week to bees, birds, bats, beetles, and other critters that move pollen from plant to plant. True, on days when your eyes are rubbed red by lunchtime and the Allegra won"t seem to kick in, you might not think the world of pollen. But in ways that transcend sinus clarity, your world wouldn"t be the same without pollinators—they"re to thank for as many as one in three bites of food eaten in the US. Pollinator Week is meant to highlight problems—like climate change, pollution, and invasive species—that threaten pollinator animals, especially bee populations that are already declining.
Pollinators: not to be sneezed at
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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An uncommon look at an American icon
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A shell of many colors
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Feel the spray in Monterey
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Life carries on, rising from a ship s skeleton
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Protecting endangered giants
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Ancient town of Sorano, Tuscany, Italy
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Fossil Day
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World Reef Awareness Day
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A Great view from above
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Christmas Bird Count turns 125
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Stuben am Arlberg, Austria
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International Kissing Day
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Happy New Year!
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National Panda Day
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Make your list and check it twice
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Composite of photographs from the Apollo 15 mission
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Beethoven s 250th
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A tribute to the ancestors
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Tesla, the visionary
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Mada in Saleh, Saudi Arabia
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Little Pigeon River, Great Smoky Mountains, Tennessee
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Chapada dos Veadeiros National Park shines
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The ‘Night of Nights’
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What’s blooming in New Zealand?
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In the Navajo Nation for Code Talkers Day
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Te Rewa Rewa Bridge near New Plymouth, New Zealand
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Why do elephants hide in trees?
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Sandhill cranes, Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, New Mexico
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Paradise Cave, Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, Vietnam
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The roots of invention
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