Minnesota pays homeowners to make lawns bee-friendly
A new spending program approved by lawmakers in 2019 called Lawns to
Legumes sets aside $900,000 annually to pay homeowners who replace traditional lawns with bee-friendly wildflowers, clover and native grasses, The Star Tribune reported. It's part of a larger effort to help the state's declining bee population.
Although the wildflowers and native grasses will benefit all species
of bees, the hope is that unmanicured lawns will specifically attract
and help the rusty patched bumblebee.
Once abundant across a wide swath of North America, the bee species
(Bombus affinis) was formally listed as endangered in March 2017. The
fuzzy, striped critters have suffered an 87% decline in population since
the mid-1990s due to factors such as climate change, pesticide
exposure, habitat loss, population fragmentation and diseases
transmitted from infected commercial domesticated honeybees.
The program will cover up to $350 of the cost for homeowners who
convert their lawns. The grants may cover more in areas targeted as
"high potential" to support rusty patched bees.
Here is the webpage on
Lawns to Legumes.
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