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Trump's emerging team of loyalists is primed for a fast start in his second term; GA activist focuses on zoning violations to advocate for environmental health; Federal tax credits help clinics expand in low-income IL communities; Experts say antibiotic resistance is growing in VT due to 'superbugs.'

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Immigrant rights groups and librarians react to Trump's win. The President-elect names philosophical allies and deregulators to White House positions and Democrats wonder how they can fight Trump policies, given the GOP's congressional majority.

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Texas women travel some of the longest distances for abortion care, Californians the shortest, rural living comes with mixed blessings for veterans, an ancient technique could curtail climate-change wildfires, and escape divisive politics on World Kindness Day.

Pollinator Week: Wrap it Up by Planting Flowers

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Friday, June 20, 2014   

BOISE, Idaho - Honey-tasting and native flower presentations have helped mark National Pollinator Week in Idaho. This week is set aside each year by the U.S. Senate, and honeybees tend to be the toast of many events, especially in light of their decline.

Scott Black, executive director of the Xerces Society, said his group has been working for years to help expand public knowledge of pollinators. While honeybees are important to agriculture, he said, the real workers in the world often are unseen by the public.

"In the scheme of our ecosystems and in the scheme of a whole variety of our crops, it's native bees," he said. "Native bees do the work."

Some native bees also are in decline. Black said several bumblebee species have been hit, possibly because of a combination of habitat loss, pesticides and infections. Xerces urged anyone with a yard, balcony or patio to help pollinators by planting flowers, providing a patch of bare dirt and shallow, clean water, and using as few pesticides as possible.

Pollinators aren't just bees, though. Black said birds do the job, along with other species.

"Moths, flies are really important pollinators, especially if you get into high-mountain areas," Black said. "Beetles become really important pollinators once you get to the equatorial areas."

He said all those insects - plus birds - are responsible for about 90 percent of all plant pollination on the planet.


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