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UMass Extension Symposium: Pollinator Health for Agriculture and Landscapes

Event date/time: 
Thursday, March 26, 2015 - 8:45am to 4:00pm

Cost: $65 for first registration,  $40/person for additional registrations from same business.

Mail-in Registration: Printable Program and Registration Form

or Register On-Line using a credit card.

8:00 AM Registration and Coffee

8:45 Welcome, Anne Averill, Dept. of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

9:00 – 10:00 AM   Biology, Diversity and Conservation of Native Bees in the Northeast
Joan Milam, Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Pollinators are key elements of native biodiversity, and bees in particular provide important ecosystem services in terms of pollination for native plants that support plant and wildlife diversity. Not only are bees important pollinators of natural systems, they are responsible for the pollination of the fruits, nuts and vegetables grown in the United States. This talk will cover bee basics: what makes a bee a bee, the great diversity of bee species, and what we can do to help conserve native bees.

10:00 – 10:45 AM  The Natural History and Ecology of Honey bees in Our Landscapes
Dr. Frank Drummond, School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine

Honey bees are amazing animals. They are one of the few insects that have been domesticated by humans, but they still remain somewhat wild. Dr. Drummond will take a look at the history of honey bees in the U.S. up to the 1960s and then how changes occurred through the present that have determined the current honey bee status and health. 

10:45 - 11:00 AM Break

1:00 – 11:45 AM   How Healthy are the Bees?
Dr. Frank Drummond, School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine

We have all heard about CCD, colony collapse, bee decline, a new silent spring...so, the question is how is the honey bee doing AND also the hundreds of species that are referred to as native bees? Dr. Drummond will discuss bee health...what is meant by "health"...what do scientists know about bee "health" and what is the global picture that is beginning to form about bee health. Dr. Drummond will attempt to provide background knowledge for better understanding several of the other talks in this conference about what we can DO about bee declines.

11:45 – 1:00 Lunch on your own – Many options on main floor of campus center
                    Take time to view exhibits

1:00 – 2:00 Designing Pollinator Support Plantings: Think Like a Bee
Dr. Lois Berg Stack, University of Maine, Northern New England Pollinator Habitat Working Group

Dr. Berg Stack will help us to think like a bee when designing pollinator support plantings. Effective pollinator support plantings provide flower resources, nest sites and water. Good site assessment allows for the selection of plants that complement existing resources, and good process can produce an effective long-term resource that requires limited maintenance.

2:00 – 2:10     Break

2:10 – 3:00 PM   Neonicotinoids in Agriculture and Landscapes: Do They Harm Honey Bees or Native Bees?
Dr. Kim Stoner, The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station

For 10 years, controversy has been swirling around the possible effects of neonicotinoids on bees. Dr. Stoner will talk about what we have learned and what we still don’t know about routes by which bees could be exposed to these systemic insecticides and how bee health may be affected. 

3:00 – 4:00 PM   Creating a Bee-friendly Landscape: Protecting Bees from Pesticide Exposure
Dr. Anne Averill, Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts

In addition to the neonicotinoids, what are the different classes of pesticides, what are their risks to pollinators, how do they interact with other stressors, and how can pollinators be protected from exposure? Guidelines on how to best manage pests while reducing the hazard to bees will be covered. Bees require an extensive safe landscape, so Dr. Averill will also address how to grow flowering plants that are safe in our yards. She will conclude with a broad look of how national and international programs address pollinator health and safety.

4 Pesticide Credits have been approved in all categories.

For more information about the program contact:
Tina Smith, Univ. of Mass, Amherst 413-545-5306, tsmith@umext.umass.edu or
Ellen Weeks, Univ. of Mass, Amherst, 413-545-2685, //eweeks@umext.umass.edu">eweeks@umext.umass.edu
 

University of Massachusetts Amherst MA