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Tag: Wetlands

The Planet’s Bee Population is Falling; Why it’s Happening, and How You Can Help

NEW YORK - According to experts, the global bee population has been falling dramatically since the 1990s; in fact, the United States has lost approximately 40 percent of its commercial honey bees in the last 13 years alone. Given that bees pollinate a great many of the foods that we eat, the fact that they are slowly disappearing from the face of the planet should be of great concern to anyone who doesn't relish the idea of going hungry and starving. But in Central New York, revitalization efforts have begun on replenishing the ecosystems that these curious creatures can survive and thrive in order to help bolster their populations.

According to experts, the global bee population has been falling dramatically since the 1990s with the United States losing approximately 40 percent of its commercial honey bees in the last 13 years. File photo: Pixabay.

Experts say in native pollinators – creatures that move pollen from one flower to another, thereby fertilizing plants and allowing them to reproduce – there are a number of ways that local government and businesses can assist and help to maintain and expand habitats that promote the survival of local bee populations. However, there are also ways that average members of the community can also work together to help as well, which we’ll get to in a bit.

Currently, bees native to New York such as bumblebees are currently facing the most trouble. Unlike some bee species, including the European honey bee, bumblebees cannot be cultivated by beekeepers. Because of this, bumblebees need sustainable environmental conditions in order to survive, and scientists are currently working on effective ways of making this happen.

Bees that are native to New York include the rusty patched bumblebee, sweat bees, and the yellow banded bumblebee, and these creatures play a significant role in any ecosystem they are currently living in due to their status as native pollinators. Bees are not only efficient pollinators, but they also choose which flowers they pollinate strategically and rely on nectar from native plants in order to live. Bees are unable to adapt to other food sources, so if those plants no longer exist within their territory, the bees native to that region will either migrate elsewhere or slowly starve to death. In order to ensure their survival, specific plants need to be imported and transplanted.

Scientists have been focusing on helping bees by restoring wetlands in Central New York in an attempt to bring more biodiversity to the region’s local ecosystems. While this has shown varying degrees of success as far as assisting local bee populations, it is also had a beneficial side effect of attracting a large number of other native pollinators – such as a variety of different bird species – to the region as well. Wetlands in central New York used to be a prominent feature, but a recent study has revealed that the region lost approximately 50 percent of its wetland acreage between the 1970s and the 1980s. However, with recent restoration efforts, the percentage of wetlands in Central New York has been increasing and the benefit to both native and returning wildlife appears to be extremely encouraging, experts say.

However, you don't have to be a scientist in order to help save your local bee population; even something as simple as mowing your lawn less often can help by keeping ground-based bee nests intact, according to researchers. Also, if you're so inclined, planting plants such as milkweed and goldenrod can be beneficial to local bee populations, as they produce the nectar that they live on; just remember to plant them a safe distance from your home if you are the type that gets squeamish at the sight of a bee buzzing around your property. There also wooden structures known as “bee hotels” available that you can set up in wooded areas around your property.

Bees may be the stereotypical pests that everyone runs away from or swats at furiously when they invade your picnic, but most people don't know the vital role they play in any ecosystem they are a part of. Finding equilibrium with the environment they live in should be the goal of every Green-minded individual, so let's remember that we're all sharing this planet together and each of us – even bees – plays a vital role.

EPA Awards over $200k to North Dakota State University to Assess Prairie Pothole Region Wetlands Restoration

 

DENVER – The EPA has awarded $209,800 in wetlands grant funding to North Dakota State University to assess ecosystem health of the Prairie Pothole Region, supporting North Dakota’s Water Quality Monitoring Strategy for Surface Waters.

 

“This grant will support restoration of North Dakota’s unique wetlands, which are an important source of groundwater recharge,” said Darcy O’Connor, Assistant Regional Administrator of the Office of Water Protection.

 

The aim of the project is to assess success of prior wetlands restorations in North Dakota and to provide guidelines for restoration monitoring. This effort helps address the state’s goal of refining and applying wetland assessment methods to evaluate the effectiveness of wetland mitigation and restoration programs and projects. Biogeochemistry, vegetation and invertebrate populations will be studied as measures of the services these wetlands provide to the environment. These data will be key in cost effective management and protection of water and wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region.  This project will be done in close collaboration with Dr. David Mushet of the Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, Jamestown, North Dakota.

 

EPA has awarded over $2.5 million in wetlands grant funding for 11 projects across EPA’s mountains and plains region of the West (Region 8). Healthy wetlands perform important ecological functions, such as feeding downstream waters, trapping floodwaters, recharging groundwater supplies, removing pollution, and providing habitat for fish and wildlife.

 

Wetlands Program Development Grants assist state, tribal, local government agencies, and interstate/intertribal entities in building programs that protect, manage, and restore wetlands and aquatic resources. States, tribes, and local wetlands programs are encouraged to develop wetlands program plans, which help create a roadmap for building capacity and achieving long-term environmental goals.

 

For more program information visit: https://www.epa.gov/wetlands/wetland-program-development-grants

EPA Awards Nearly $400k in Wetlands Grants in Wyoming to Bolster Wetland Assessments and Development of Water Quality Tools and Data

DENVER – The EPA has awarded $397,064 in wetlands grant funding to the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and the University of Wyoming. These projects will help build a robust wetlands program in the state by providing much needed mapping and spatial data. Projects will also demonstrate restoration techniques and support local stakeholders in wetlands management and decision making.

 

“These projects will support the generation of solid scientific data to support local decision making,” said Darcy O’Connor, Assistant Regional Administrator of the Office of Water Protection. “Wyoming’s wetland program development will serve the state’s environment and communities well into the future.”

 

The Wyoming Game and Fish Department was awarded $222,500 for a project to develop a wetlands program that will help grow local capacity for multi-benefit conservation efforts.

 

In collaboration with Ducks Unlimited, the Wyoming Game and Fish department will implement and showcase wet meadow restoration techniques focused on agricultural lands, conduct training on wetland ecosystem services for local decision makers, offer wetland technical expertise in watershed planning to increase participation in voluntary restoration, develop wetland management guidelines for producing desired plant communities in drought prone systems and explore the feasibility of using beaver dam analog structures and improving permitting guidelines.

 

The University of Wyoming was awarded $174,564 to develop Wyoming wetlands information and spatial data online. The University will incorporate useful information about wetlands (their features, distribution, and condition) into the Wyoming Natural Diversity Databases and create a new wetlands segment of the existing website to make the data readily available.

 

EPA has awarded over $2.5 million in wetlands grant funding for 11 projects across EPA’s mountains and plains region of the West (Region 8). Healthy wetlands perform important ecological functions, such as feeding downstream waters, trapping floodwaters, recharging groundwater supplies, removing pollution, and providing habitat for fish and wildlife.

 

Wetlands Program Development Grants assist state, tribal, local government agencies, and interstate/intertribal entities in building programs that protect, manage, and restore wetlands and aquatic resources. States, tribes, and local wetlands programs are encouraged to develop wetlands program plans, which help create a roadmap for building capacity and achieving long-term environmental goals.

 

For more program information visit: https://www.epa.gov/wetlands/wetland-program-development-grants

EPA Awards $630k+ to Utah Agencies to Bolster Wetland Assessments and Water Quality Improvements

 

Utah Department of Environmental Quality and Utah Geological Survey address wetland health and water quality in Great Salt Lake, Central Basin and Range and Cache County wetlands

 

DENVER -  The EPA has awarded $631,405 in wetlands grants to the Utah Department of Environment Quality (UDEQ) and the Utah Geological Survey (UGS) to survey, assess and map wetlands in the state of Utah.

 

"Utah’s Great Salt Lake, Central Basin and Range, and Cache County wetlands are resources to be understood and protected,” said Darcy O’Connor, Assistant Regional Administrator of the Office of Water Protection. “Wetland resources in Utah are critical for many reasons including maintaining water quality, preserving water supply in times of drought and preventing flooding.”

 

UDEQ was awarded $221,250 to improve Great Salt Lake wetland quality through monitoring of wetland uses, water quality and condition. By gathering a combination of high-frequency water quality data, bird use data and more, UDEQ will be looking at persistent concerns about the links between excess nutrients in wetlands and the ability to support their recreational and aquatic life uses. Methods for monitoring impounded and fringe wetlands around Great Salt Lake will continue to be improved, and a high-frequency monitoring network to track water quality processes will be built. Outreach, coordination, and data dissemination will also be included in this project.

 

UGS was awarded $219,670 to gather baseline data on Utah’s Central Basin and Range wetlands and to characterize high quality reference condition for important wetland types in the region. Wetlands will be surveyed with an existing protocol that collects data on vegetation, water quality parameters, soil characteristics, and wetland condition, and two new components will be added to the protocol, soil salinity measurement and evaluation of floodwater storage capacity. Results will improve understanding and protection of wetlands in this region.

 

UGS was also awarded $190,485 to update and further develop wetland spatial data for the state of Utah. UGS will map wetlands in the Cache County with enhanced attribution that will make it possible to link wetland spatial data to potential functions. UGS will also enhance the accessibility of wetland data by adding additional data to the UGS’s wetland mapper application, including a landscape profile for major watersheds in Utah.

 

EPA has awarded over $2.5 million in wetlands grant funding for 11 projects across EPA’s mountains and plains region of the West (Region 8). Healthy wetlands perform important ecological functions, such as feeding downstream waters, trapping floodwaters, recharging groundwater supplies, removing pollution, and providing habitat for fish and wildlife.

 

Wetlands Program Development Grants assist state, tribal, local government agencies, and interstate/intertribal entities in building programs that protect, manage, and restore wetlands and aquatic resources. States, tribes, and local wetlands programs are encouraged to develop wetlands program plans, which help create a roadmap for building capacity and achieving long-term environmental goals.

 

For more program information visit: https://www.epa.gov/wetlands/wetland-program-development-grants

EPA Awards $575k+ in Wetlands Grants in Colorado to Bolster Wetland Assessments and Development of Water Quality Tools and Data

Colorado Natural Heritage Society and Colorado State University-Natural Heritage Program will provide invaluable resources to Roaring Fork and Aurora watershed stakeholders

 

DENVER - The EPA has awarded $575,333 in wetlands grants to two programs in Colorado to survey, assess, map and provide technological tools such as smart phone applications.

 

“The data these projects generate are important to understanding, protecting and restoring wetlands in the state of Colorado,” said Darcy O’Connor, Assistant Regional Administrator of the Office of Water Protection. “Supporting decision making with solid scientific data is the wise approach to wetlands protection.”

 

Colorado Natural Heritage Society was awarded $221,250 to survey and assess critical wetlands in the Roaring Fork watershed in western Colorado. This project proposes to conduct a prioritized survey and assessment for critical wetlands within the Roaring Fork Watershed. The primary goal is to provide stakeholders, including private landowners with scientifically valid data on the condition, rarity, location, acres, and types of wetlands within the watershed.

 

Colorado State University’s Colorado Natural Heritage Program (CNHP) was awarded $221,250  for the 5th phase of CNHP’s wetlands database including vegetation classification, floristic quality assessment, a wetland restoration database and updates to the Colorado Wetlands Mobile App.  The CNHP will revise Colorado’s wetland and riparian vegetation classification and floristic quality assessment, and create a Colorado wetland and stream restoration database.

 

The CNHP was also awarded $132,833 to assess critical urban wetlands in the city of Aurora, Colorado. CNHP will update the National Wetland Inventory mapping and conduct field-based wetland assessments in the greater Aurora area. Water quality data will also be collected at these sites. The goal is to create useful products for local land managers, land owners and community members.

 

EPA has awarded over $2.5 million in wetlands grant funding for 11 projects across EPA’s mountains and plains region of the West (Region 8). Healthy wetlands perform important ecological functions, such as feeding downstream waters, trapping floodwaters, recharging groundwater supplies, removing pollution, and providing habitat for fish and wildlife.

 

Wetlands Program Development Grants assist state, tribal, local government agencies, and interstate/intertribal entities in building programs that protect, manage, and restore wetlands and aquatic resources. States, tribes, and local wetlands programs are encouraged to develop wetlands program plans, which help create a roadmap for building capacity and achieving long-term environmental goals.

 

For more program information visit: https://www.epa.gov/wetlands/wetland-program-development-grants

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