Researchers call on backyard scientists to help
save pollinators
Send a link to a friend
[June 04, 2021]
Fluttering quietly and steadily from flower to
bloom, butterflies, bees and other pollinators do the hard
background work of fertilizing flowering plants, fruits and crops. |
But these unsung heroes are in danger. Studies
have shown an estimated 40% of insect species, including the monarch
butterfly, are at risk of extinction in the coming decades, driven
primarily by habitat loss.
“The entomological community is gripped by this impending crisis,
but the public doesn’t even know about it,” says May Berenbaum, an
entomologist with University of Illinois.
Now, there’s a way for backyard gardeners in rural and urban areas
to help. For the third year, University of Illinois Extension is
calling all lovers of bees, butterflies, and every pollinator in
between to join scientists for the community research project
I-Pollinate.
Using at-home flower gardens either in the ground or in containers,
I-Pollinate volunteers of all ages can observe pollinators and
submit data to help track their distribution and habitats.
Volunteers will spend time outside, often with friends and young
family members, learning about scientific research, plants and
pollinators. Illinois Extension Horticulture Educator Kelly Allsup
says, “We learned how to identify what’s in our gardens, but also
about the scientific process. Even no data is data that the
scientists need to make recommendations on what plants can support
pollinators.” [to top of second
column] |
Researchers have three projects the public can join. One focuses
on planting a study garden to see which ornamental landscaping flowers
pollinators are food sources. Another tracks monarch butterfly eggs and
caterpillars.
Michael McKelvey is coordinating the I-Pollinate BeeSpotter project recording
bumblebee and honeybee sightings to help create accurate distribution maps for
Illinois. He says they hope more people in rural areas join.
“For creatures as small and hard to spot as bees, flies, and moths, there’s
really no substitute for citizen scientists,” McKelvey says. “Many volunteers
come from population centers which provides important data but also leaves blank
spots on the map.”
Those interested in helping scientists conserve pollinators can learn more about
the project at ipollinate.illinois.edu. Volunteers will be trained on how to
collect data, with the first collection starting June 21 during National
Pollinator Week.
[SOURCE: Kelly Allsup, Horticulture
Educator, Illinois Extension
WRITER: Emily Steele, Illinois Extension, media communications
coordinator]
|