Chemical-intensive agriculture threatens biodiversity, particularly in pollinators such as the monarch butterfly.
One gardener was shocked to learn about a supposedly native plant mix that was actually full of non-native seeds.
Among the humming flash of sunbirds and insects drawn to the flowers, an unusual visitor appears: the Ethiopian wolf.
The movement to “rewild” yards and cultivate more naturalistic spaces through home gardening continues to gain momentum.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) announced a proposal this week to list the monarch as “threatened” and give it ...
Millions of western monarch butterflies once visited Oregon and other Western states each spring to drink flower nectar, pollinate plants and lay their eggs after wintering in forests in coastal Calif ...
Environmentalists say climate change is threatening the butterflies by skewing migration patterns and hindering the growth of ...
U.S. wildlife officials announced a decision Tuesday to extend federal protections to monarch butterflies after years of ...
Although it has been in decline, the butterfly is found throughout the United States, which made this a particularly ...
Plants can bring a bit of sunlight into anyone’s life. Whether people decide to put a dozen roses on the kitchen table or ...
University of Minnesota Extension is presenting a free webinar series to learn how you can support pollinators in any space — big or small — and ...
There’s a lot we have to learn about them but what we do know is that, as well as being specialist pollinators of native plants, most bees will pollinate a wide range of other plants as well.