U.S. Forest Service Eastern Region (R-9) Botanist: Cultivars needed for world food supply, but native plants help pollinators and thus humans.
Author Archives: Admin
Crop Wild Relatives: U.S. Forest Service, others protect future plant and food supply from genetics
Crop Wild Relatives: U.S. Forest Service and partners protect future plant, food supply from genetics.
Conservation of original plant genetics is a huge goal of the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and others around the globe to protect the future plant and food supply from any alterations.
USFS R-9 Botanist Jan Schultz explains the importance of Crop Wild Relatives (CWR) to future generations: Pure CWR like “wild raspberries, the wild strawberries, the wild blueberries, the wild corn — the precursor to corn was Teosinte” that doesn’t resemble the current corn and is a “little bitty thing that is now still in Central America.”
EarthKeepers II/Great Lakes Restoration Initiative: Rethink War on Dandelions/Wildflowers in Search for ‘Perfect Lawn’
EarthKeepers II is an Interfaith Energy Conservation and Community Garden Initiative to Restore Native Plants and Protect the Great Lakes from Toxins like Airborne Mercury – across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and northeast Wisconsin – in cooperation with the EPA Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, U.S. Forest Service, 10 faith traditions and Native American tribes like the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community.
EarthKeepers II and the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative are battling non-native invasive species that ruin ecosystems and hurt pollinators like bees and butterflies.
The EarthKeepers II Technical Advisor for Community Gardens is Jan Schultz, head botanist at the USFS Eastern Region (R-9) Office in Milwaukee, WI.
Schultz is sharing her expertise about pollinators, native plants, invasive species, cultivars and other issues related to a healthy ecosystem.
Americans need to rethink their war on dandelions and other native plants – like wildflowers – as they search for the so-called “perfect lawn” – that is not pollinator friendly, Schultz says.
Great Lakes Restoration Initiative: Interfaith Pollinator Gardens/Native Plants are Solution to Spreading Invasive Plants
EarthKeepers II is an Interfaith Energy Conservation and Community Garden Initiative to Restore Native Plants and Protect the Great Lakes from Toxins like Airborne Mercury – across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and northeast Wisconsin – in cooperation with the EPA Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, U.S. Forest Service, 10 faith traditions and Native American tribes like the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community.
EarthKeepers II and the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative are battling non-native invasive species that ruin ecosystems and hurt pollinators like bees and butterflies.
The EarthKeepers II Technical Advisor for Community Gardens is Jan Schultz, head botanist at the USFS Eastern Region (R-9) Office in Milwaukee, WI.
Schultz is sharing her expertise about pollinators, native plants, invasive species, cultivars and other issues related to a healthy ecosystem.
EarthKeepers II Project Coord. Kyra Fillmore Ziomkowski on 30 interfaith community gardens in U.P.
EarthKeepers II (EK II) Project Coordinator Kyra Fillmore Ziomkowski explains creating 30 interfaith community gardens (2013-2014) across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan that include vegetables and native species plants that encourage and help pollinators like bees and butterflies.
The video was shot on April 5, 2013 at the Big Bay Point Lighthouse Bed and Breakfast in Big Bay, MI during a meeting of EK II representatives.
EarthKeepers II, Great Lakes Restoration Initiative-MI/WI Interfaith Goal to Reduce Airborne Mercury
Thanks to the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, EarthKeepers II is helping reduce airborne mercury — by assisting northern Michigan religious communities as they reduce energy consumption in their homes and Houses of Worship.
EarthKeepers II (EK II) is an interfaith community garden and energy conservation initiative across the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and Northeast Wisconsin.
The two-year project is funded by the EPA Great Lakes Restoration Initiative in cooperation with Anishinaabe Native American tribes and 10 faiths representing 250 churches and temples.
EK II supports the planting of 30 interfaith community gardens that include vegetables — and pollinator-friendly native plants.
Reducing airborne mercury is the goal of energy conservation audits at 40 houses of worship — completed by the fall of 2013.
Video of The Fight to Stop Michigan Wolf Hunt by Northern Michigan University Students
Keep Michigan Wolves Protected: The Fight to Stop Michigan Wolf Hunt by Northern Michigan University Students
Video of Adam Robarge, with the Keep Michigan Wolves Protected campaign
Keep Michigan Wolves Protected: The Volunteer Experience (Adam)
Wolf Hunt Petition Signing
Northern Michigan University Environment and Native American Students This Wednesday Join Debate Over Wolf Hunting in Michigan
(Marquette, MI) – For spiritual, religious, cultural, ecological and common sense reasons, two groups of Northern Michigan University students are hosting an anti-wolf hunt education and petition signing event this Wednesday to help put the issue before Michigan voters.
The “Wolf Hunt Petition Signing Night” is from 7-10 p.m. this Wed., Feb. 27, 2013 in Jamrich 103 on the NMU Campus sponsored by the NMU EarthKeepers II Student Team and the Native American Students Association (NASA).