Sentences with phrase «through pollination»

Honey bee populations alone add more than $ 15 billion in value to US agricultural crops each year through pollination.
«Honeybees and other pollinators are in trouble almost everywhere, and they pay us a lot of services through their pollination,» said Fuentes.
Honey bees provide ecosystem services through pollination of crops worth $ 215 billion annually worldwide.
While we beeline to markets with grateful open arms and baskets, we can't forget to be thankful for nature's own farmer — the honeybee — for without them, we wouldn't be able to enjoy the delicious splendors of over 80 crops our nation depends on through their pollination.

Not exact matches

Matching tongue length to flower depth makes foraging and pollination more efficient, and many such matches have evolved through time.
Upon successful pollination on the stigma, the pollen tube grows down through the pistil towards the ovary.
Many plants are pollinated by insects and vertebrates (e.g., bats and or birds) that have evolved highly specialized flowers facilitating pollination by a specific group or species that are themselves concomitantly adapted through co-evolution.
Through her research, Dr. Gallagher addresses questions about the mechanisms governing how global climate change affects plant - pollinator interactions and the extent to which changes in the levels of pollination influence the ecology and evolution of plant populations.
«To date, there are no fossil plants from this geological era that offer proof of the existence of ornithophily — i.e., the pollination of flowers through birds,» adds paleobotanist Wilde.
Until now, however, there had been no information at what time pollination through vertebrates, and birds in particular, came into existence.
Life Science: Seeds & Pollination Build understanding of pollination through desPollination Build understanding of pollination through despollination through design models.
For three decades Jusidman has engaged the possibilities of painting through a variety of resourceful explorations, for instance of multiple systems of perspective (The Astronomer [1987 — 90]-RRB-, of the intricacies of expression (en - treat - ment [1998]-RRB-, and of pollinations between media and art (The Economist Shuffle [2006 — 9]-RRB-.
At Catlin Gabel School, a major curricular focus across grades Pre-K through 12 is on the different strands of gardening, pollination, climate change, energy use, economics, bodily health, and social justice as they intersect at the central point of food.
While students learn about water cycles, pollination, waste streams and biodiversity in the classroom, the tangible benefits are experienced as they walk through sustainable buildings and outdoor courtyards, designed to provide healthy habitats for humans.
You tell me what business, what economy, what country can operate without air, water, food, energy, material, climate control regulation, an ultraviolet radiation shield, pollination, seed dispersal, water purification and distribution through the hydrological cycle, flood control, and insect control.
In turn they provide massive economic benefits to human society, both through the production of honey and pollination of a large variety of fruit, vegetable, nut, and flower crops.
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