Declining populations of pollinators is a major concern to ecologists
because bees, butterflies and other insects play a critical role in
supporting healthy ecosystems. Now a new study from urban ecologists at
the University of Massachusetts Amherst suggests that when urban and
suburban lawns are left untreated with herbicides, they provide a
diversity of “spontaneous” flowers such as dandelions and clover that
offer nectar and pollen to bees and other pollinators.
Private
lawns make up a significant part of urban lands in the United States, an
estimated 50 percent of city and suburbs, say Susannah Lerman and
co-author Joan Milam, an adjunct research fellow in environmental
conservation. They write, “Practices that support nesting and foraging
opportunities for bees could have important implications for bee
conservation in suburban areas.”
Lerman, an adjunct UMass Amherst
faculty member who is also with the U.S. Forest Service, says, “We are
still surprised at how many bees we found on these untreated lawns.”
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