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Planning for spring's garden? Bees like variety and don't care about your neighbors' yardsshares her new research showing that bees, in particular, don't really care about the landscape surrounding flower gardens. They seem to zero in on the particular types of flowers they like, no matter ...
March in New England brings the earliest signs of spring. Plants that have been dormant all winter start to wake up and so do ...
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ZME Science on MSNMagnolias are so ancient they’re pollinated by beetles — because bees didn’t exist yetWhile modern trees like maples and ashes have switched to wind pollination — releasing clouds of pollen to be scattered at ...
Flower shape and size impact urban bee survival. Discover how planting diverse blooms can support wild bee populations.
And March 12 is National Plant a Flower Day, the perfect day to bask in the sunlight and plant flowers that will help ...
Spring is approaching in the northern hemisphere, and with it come the perennial considerations about which kinds of flowers ...
Just focus on planting different kinds of flowers—and lots of them. To test whether bees are more plentiful in natural areas, Russo and her team planted identical gardens—roughly 10 feet by 6. ...
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