Copyright 2007 USPS. All Rights Reserved. Steve Buchanan (artist).
The four-design, 20-stamp Pollination booklet was released during National Pollinator Week, June 24-30 2007. Depicted on the Pollination stamps by artist Steve Buchanan are four wildflowers and four pollinators. Two Morrison's bumble bees (Bombus morrisoni) are paired with purple or chaparral nightshade (Solanum xanti) (one of the bees is actively engaged in buzz pollination). A calliope hummingbird (Stellula calliope) sips from a hummingbird trumpet (Epilobium canum) blossom. A lesser long-nosed bat (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae) prepares to "dive" into a saguaro (Carnegiea gigantea) flower. And a southern dogface butterfly (Colias cesonia) visits prairie or common ironweed (Vernonta fasciculata).
The four stamps are arranged in two alternate and interlocking patterns. In one block, the pollinators form a central starburst. In the other, the flowers are arranged in the center. "These stamps are a special way to honor the beauty that is in our midst each day," said Yverne Pat Moore, Postmaster, Washington, D.C., U.S. Postal Service. "The animals featured on the stamps are beautiful ambassadors of nature." Read the U.S. Postal Service Press Release (U.S. Postal Service).
Pollinators
Imagine living in a world without bees or other pollinators! It would be a world without flowers, fruit, even a cup of coffee. A world, even, without chocolate!
Thanks to the wonderful work of bees, butterflies, birds, and other animal pollinators, the world's flowering plants are able to reproduce and bear fruit, providing many of the foods we eat, the plant materials we and other organisms use, and the beauty we see around us. Yet today, there is evidence indicating alarming pollinator population declines worldwide.
Domesticated honey bees are not the only pollinators in trouble these days. Many species of butterflies, moths, birds, bats and other pollinators are also in retreat, threatening not only the production of commercial crops but also a wide range of flowering plants, including rare and endangered species.
"Action must be taken to reverse these trends," says Stephen Buchmann, an entomologist formerly with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, Arizona. According to Buchmann, only a few of these pollinators (mainly Hawaiian bird species) are protected by the Federal Endangered Species Act. "This is simply because the world is focused on the charismatic megafauna--the lions and tigers and bears," he says. "The little things that run the world, including bees, butterflies, bats and hummingbirds, go unnoticed and unprotected until it is sometimes too late."
Mark Your Calendar for National Pollinator Week - June 22-28, 2008
The Senate passed Resolution 580 "Recognizing the importance of pollinators to ecosystem health and agriculture in the United States and the value of partnership efforts to increase awareness about pollinators and support for protecting and sustaining pollinators by designating June 24 though June 30, 2007, as 'National Pollinator Week'." Read Resolution 580. The upcoming National Pollinator Week is June 22-28, 2008.
Additionally, Mike Johans, Secretary of Agriculture at the United States Department of Agriculture, issued a proclamation calling upon the people of the United States to join in celebrating the vital significance of pollinators to agriculture and to public lands as well as the Department's conservation assistance to farmers and ranchers and its management of ecosystems providing valuable pollinator habitats through the Nation, and recognizing National Pollinator Week. Read the Proclamation (University of Arizona Press).
The declaration of National Pollinator Week was brought about largely through the efforts of the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign (NAPPC). To read more about the events of National Pollinator Week 2007, click here... To find out what is happening during National Pollinator Week 2008, click here...
Haagen-Dazs(R)' new HelpTheHoneyBees web site provides a fun, colorful and informative explanation and exploration of the importance of honey bees as pollinators and the importance of their pollination services to the Haagen-Dazs(R) product range.
"Bee pollination is essential for ingredients in nearly 40 percent"of Haagen-Dazs(R) super-premium ice cream flavors. The web site also includes a "bee store" with bee-friendly merchandise. Profits from the"bee store" go towards funding honey bee research. Bravo Haagen-Dazs(R)!
National Academy of Sciences released a Report on the Status of Pollinators in North America on October 18, 2006. The report provides an analysis of the status of managed and unmanaged pollinator populations in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. It can be purchased from the National Academies Press web site. Free PDF copies of the Report in Brief or the Executive Summary are also available for download from the web.
Quote: "For most North American pollinator species, long-term population data are lacking and knowledge of their basic ecology is incomplete."
The NBII Program is administered by the Biological Informatics Office of the U.S. Geological Survey