What measures do you suggest to protect the pollinators?
Answers
Go Native
Choose native plants in a variety of shapes and colors to encourage diversity. Remember that native wildflowers will be better adapted to your climate than exotics.
Save the Queen
Plant Milkweed
Adding milkweed to your garden provides food for monarch butterfly caterpillars, but don’t forget nectar sources for the adults, such as flowers that bloom in late summer.
Offer Bee Real Estate
Install a bee block or bee hotel, which are available online or at some garden stores. (Or, build one yourself.) You could also drill holes of varying sizes in a dead tree that's still standing (if beetles haven't done it for you). This offers habitat to the many bee species that nest in pre-existing holes.
Make a Border
By bordering your fruits and vegetables with native flowers, you'll improve pollination of your crops and also support bees when the crops stop blooming. It will also attract and support other pollinators such as wasps and hover flies that control crop pests.
Go Easy on the Chemicals
Pesticides can affect more than pests.
HLO MATE HERE IS UR ANSWER.
❤. MEASURES TO PROTECT THE POLLINATORS❤
⭐. Creating a own pollinator - friendly garden using a variety of native flowering plants.
⭐. Encouraging the planting of native flowers in open spaces and outside public buildings.
⭐. Reducing the level of pesticides used in and around our home.
⭐. Encouraging local clubs to build artifical habitats like butterfly gardens , bee boards and bee boxes.
⭐. Supporting agriculture enterprises with pollinator - friendly practices such as farms that avoid pesticides use.
⭐. Encouraging government agencies to take into account that full economic benefits of wild pollinators when formating policies for agriculture.
⭐. Stress the need to develop techniques for cultivating native pollinator species for crop pollination.