For Beginners, a Guide to Pollinators

Jun 6, 2013

For Beginners, a Guide to Pollinators

Jun 6, 2013

So many flowers.  So many pollinators. So many floral visitors.

On every field trip, we see something new and different, such as the male long-horned bee, Melissodes communis (below) on salvia and the female sunflower bee, Svastra obliqua expurgata, on a Mexican hat flower.

With so much interest in pollinators, it's good to see that biologist Beatriz Moisset has written a downloadable book, "A Beginners Guide to Pollinators and other Flower Visitors." It's meant for young adults and beginners.

Moisset, a resident of Willow Grove, Penn., received her doctorate in biology from the University of Cordoba, Argentina. She completed her postdoctoral work at the Jackson Laboratories, Bar Harbor, Maine, studying neurochemistry and behavior.

She's "retired," but like so many dedicated  biologists, she's not. She's a talented artist, photographer, author and public speaker. 

Moisset's book, available for a nominal price, covers the most common flower visitors, including pollinators. It includes brief descriptions, illustrations, geographic distribution, habitat and season.  

You'll find her insect photography and text on BugGuide.Net and on her pollinator blog,?http://pollinators.blogspot.com/. Check out her amazing photos!

And her book? It's available through Barnes and Noble, Lulu.com, and ITunes

We remember that back in 2011, she teamed with entomologist Stephen Buchmann, who received his doctorate in entomology in 1978 from UC Davis (his major professor was Robbin Thorp), to publish the USDA Forest Service/Pollinator Partnership publication, "Bee Basics: An Introduction to Our Native Bees" with illustrator Steve Buchanan. (Just click on the link to download.)

The more we know about our native bees and the flowers they pollinate, the more we can protect them.

"We are all part of the web of life," Moisset writes on her blog. "Animals need plants and plants need animals and ultimately we all need each other in a very intricate and complex web of interactions."

So true.