The content of this course is tailored to the needs of NRCS, SWCD, Cooperative Extension, and state department of agriculture employees, as well as crop consultants, natural resource specialists, non-governmental conservation organization staff, and producers of bee-pollinated crops.
Registration is $25 for the first 60 registrants, and thereafter is $45 per person. Course registration includes lunch and a copy of Attracting Native Pollinators.
Canceled registrations can be refunded until November 13, 2014.
Thursday November 20, 2014 from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM EST
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Sara Morris
The Xerces Society
503-232-6639
shortcourses@xerces.org
The Xerces Society provides reasonable accommodations for special events with adequate notice. To request accommodation for events, please contact shortcourses@xerces.org by Thursday, November 6th, 2014.
The USDA and the Xerces Society are equal-opportunity providers and employers.
This Pollinator Conservation Short Course is made possible with the support of the Southern Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) program, and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Additional support for this training is provided by the following: The Ceres Trust, CS Fund, Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund, Endangered Species Chocolate, Elizabeth Ordway Dunn Foundation, Sarah K. de Coizart Article TENTH Perpetual Charitable Trust, Turner Foundation, Inc., Whole Foods Market and its vendors, and Xerces Society members.
Special thanks to Virginia NRCS for their leadership in coordinating with the Eastern Shore Soil and Water Conservation District, the Virginia Eastern Shore Land Trust, and Mid-Atlantic Farm Credit in providing tremendous support for this program. Special thanks to the Eastern Shore Soil and Water Conservation District for providing lunch and to the Eastern Shore Community College for providing meeting space. Additional thanks to Virginia Cooperative Extension for Accomack and Northampton Counties, the Eastern Shore RC&D, and Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries for their broad support of this course and for pollinators. Thanks also to the Chesapeake Bay Foundation for supporting conservation work and providing an exhibit for the program.
Bumble bee on buttonbush by Bob Glennon.
Pollinator Conservation Short Course
Eastern Shore Community College
Melfa, Virginia
Thursday, November 20, 2014
9:00 am - 4:00 pm EDT
Learn how to attract native pollinators to fields, farms, and orchards!
Pollinators, which include bees, butterflies, and other insects, are essential to our environment. The ecological service they provide is necessary for the reproduction of more than 85 percent of the world's flowering plants and is fundamental to agriculture and natural ecosystems. More than two-thirds of the world's crop species are dependent on pollination, with an annual estimated value of $18 to $27 billion in the United States alone. Beyond agriculture, pollinators are keystone species in most terrestrial ecosystems, since their activities are ultimately responsible for the seeds and fruits that feed everything from songbirds to black bears. Conservation of pollinating insects is critically important to preserving both wider biodiversity, as well as agriculture.
In many places, however, this essential service is at risk. In 2006, the National Academy of Sciences released the report Status of Pollinators in North America, which called attention to the decline of pollinators. The report urged agencies and organizations to increase awareness and protect pollinator habitat. The Pollinator Conservation Short Course was developed to address this need.
Introductory topics include the principles of pollinator biology, the economics of insect pollination, basic bee field identification, and evaluating pollinator habitat. Advanced modules will cover land management practices for pollinator protection, pollinator habitat restoration, incorporating pollinator conservation into federal conservation programs, selection of plants for pollinator enhancement sites, management of natural landscapes, and financial and technical resources to support these efforts. Throughout the short course these training modules are illustrated by case studies of pollinator conservation efforts across the country.
Registrants will receive the Xerces Society's Pollinator Conservation Toolkit which includes Xerces' book, Attracting Native Pollinators. Protecting North America's Bees and Butterflies, as well as habitat management guidelines and relevant USDA-NRCS and extension publications.
The Xerces Society is offering similar Pollinator Conservation Short Courses across the country. Visit our online events page to view up-to-date short course information. If you would like to receive announcements about upcoming short courses, please email shortcourses@xerces.org. Be sure to include the following information: name, affiliation, mailing address, phone number, and the state(s) for which you would like to receive announcements.
*Continuing Education Credits Available*
NRCS Certified Conservation Planner (4 CEUs)
Certified Crop Adviser (5 CEUs)
Society of American Foresters (5 CFE credits)
The Wildlife Society (5.5 contact hours)
SHORT COURSE TRAINING SKILLS AND OBJECTIVES
COURSE AGENDA
Module 1 Introduction - The Importance of Pollinator Conservation
Module 2 Basic Bee & Beneficial Insect Biology
Module 3 Bee-Friendly Farming
Module 4 Habitat Restoration
Module 5 Field Tools (outdoors, weather permitting)
Module 6 Native Wildlife Habitat Establishment in Virginia
Module 7 Current Farm Bill Provisions
Module 8 Additional Resources
Module 9 Wrap Up
INSTRUCTORS
Nancy Lee Adamson, PhD – Pollinator Conservation Specialist - East Region
Nancy is the Pollinator Conservation Specialist - East Region for the Xerces Society and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service East National Technology Support Center (ENTSC). She supports pollinator conservation care of the ENTSC in Greensboro, North Carolina. She studied bees important for crop pollination and meadow restoration in the mid-Atlantic, ran the horticulture and Master Gardener programs for Frederick County, Maryland’s Cooperative Extension, and has long been involved in inventorying, collecting seed, and propagating native plants for habitat restoration. As Education Coordinator and Nursery Manager at Adkins Arboretum on the eastern shore of Maryland, she started a local ecotype propagation program following work with Bloomin’ Natives (now Chesapeake Natives). A former Peace Corps volunteer in Tunisia, she also worked as an intern with Cultural Survival in Petén, Guatemala.
Bob Glennon, MFR, CF – Private Lands Biologist, Virginia Tech's Conservation Management Institute, Southeast Virginia
Bob is a private lands biologist in Smithfield, Virginia with Virginia Tech’s Conservation Management Institute. Bob assists landowners throughout southeastern Virginia manage their land for wildlife and pollinator habitat. He has 30 years of Federal service with USDA, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Bob spent most of the first half of his career in the NRCS plant materials program serving landowners and land managers from the states of Texas through Kentucky to Massachusetts and south to Florida. He collected and evaluated native grasses, forbs, and shrubs for use in conservation practices and assisted the public establish and manage plants for a variety of uses. He was the state ecologist in Arkansas where he trained field employees and assisted landowners in wildlife habitat management, wetland restoration, and streambank stabilization.
GUEST SPEAKER
Jenny Templeton – Soil Conservationist, NRCS
Jenny is the Soil Conservationist in the Accomac NRCS Service Center, which serves both Northampton and Accomack Counties. She has been representing NRCS on the Shore for almost 3 years, assisting producers and landowners to install and implement various conservation practices, from pollinator and wildlife habitat to precision nutrient management techniques to cover crops that improve soil health. She was the Soil Conservation Technician in the Lexington, VA NRCS Service Center, which serves Rockbridge County. There, she assisted producers and landowners with installing livestock watering systems, stream crossings, livestock access roads, and other conservation practices. She earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Studies from Randolph-Macon College in 2006 and her Master of Science degree in Agricultural and Life Sciences from Virginia Tech in 2013.
ABOUT THE XERCES SOCIETY
The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation is an international nonprofit organization that protects wildlife through the conservation of invertebrates and their habitat. The Society's Pollinator Conservation Program was launched in 1996, and works with leading native pollinator ecologists to translate the latest research findings into on-the-ground conservation. More information about the Xerces Society is available at www.xerces.org.