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Sierra Club ..'s Twitter Updates

Daily Roundup: December 2, 2009: Inked Activists: A U.K. art collective tattooed the images of endangered species o... http://bit.ly/6eR5Lv 3 days ago
Book Review Wednesday: Environmental History Books: Every Wednesday, we review a selection of new and upcoming book... http://bit.ly/5zyq4n 3 days ago
Daily Roundup: November 19, 2009: Watch This: The California Energy Commission approved the nation’s first energy... http://bit.ly/3kfVVb 16 days ago
@livenature You can sponsor a wild place without the stuffed animal too, if you like: http://bit.ly/sponsorwild 16 days ago
Buying Greener Gold: A new gold ring may dazzle, but its environmental history isn't very shiny. Many eco-minded peo... http://bit.ly/Eu5by 16 days ago
 

Art Crops Up in Kansas

Posted Sep 12 2008 11:27am

If you like artichokes, figs, honey, almonds--or tequila--you have pollinators to thank for your favorite treats. According to the North American Pollinator Protection Campaign (NAPPC), pollinating animals (mostly insects) "contribute to one out of every three bites we eat" and help 85 percent of wild flowering plants reproduce. Like other wild creatures, pollinators are at risk from habitat destruction and pollution, but bats and bees don't draw the same kind of sympathy as penguins and polar bears.

Crop_art_2 To help promote the plight of these small, but essential animals, earthworks artist Stan Herd is creating a living installation (shown here in a preliminary sketch) depicting one of the most charismatic pollinators--the butterfly. The 50-foot Southern Dogface butterfly made out of squash, sunflowers, and other crops planted on a Kansas farm is based on one of four pollination-themed stamps being issued by the U.S. Postal Service this Friday. The NAPPC is providing tips for gardeners, cooks, and anyone else who wants to help celebrate and protect pollinating species. Tequila sunrise (tequila [bat] + orange juice [bee] + cherry [bee]), anyone?

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