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:
-
World Bicycle Day
-
For the love of bikes
-
National Hummingbird Day
-
Brotherly cubs
-
Avatar Mountains, Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, China
-
Summer solstice
-
National Go Birding Day
-
On a Healing Field for Veterans Day
-
A hermitage with a view
-
Tour de France begins
-
San Francisco Bay salt flats
-
Back to the nest
-
High trekking season in Upper Mustang
-
Icelandic horses, Iceland
-
Skógafoss waterfall, Iceland
-
Ad-Deir, Petra, Jordan
-
Rainbow Mountain
-
A fair that s star-studded
-
How do ladybugs winter?
-
International Haiku Poetry Day
-
Venice Skatepark, Los Angeles, California
-
Irohazaka road
-
Of moose and Maine
-
A city of bridges
-
Get amped for Glastonbury
-
Hallstatt, Austria
-
Relationship status: It s complicated
-
Aspens in the White River National Forest, Colorado
-
World Population Day
-
Finnish Independence Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

