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Insects and Pollinators

Insects have segmented bodies, legs with joints, and external skeletons, called exoskeletons. They are the only winged invertebrates (animals without backbones), though not all insects have wings. Flight helps ensure success in colonizing, creating new habitats and pollinating.

Pollinators move pollen from the stamen, the male part of the flower, to the stigma, the female part of the same flower. Pollinators include bees, wasps, birds, butterflies, moths, flies and even some small mammals, including bats. Pollinators help about 80% of the world's flowering plants to reproduce.

On this page, find information about the roles of insects, beekeeping and pollination, invasive species, and links to scientific data sets.

Beekeeping

There are many insect pollinators.  Farmers and hobbyists use bees, for example, to operate a variety of enterprises including production of beeswax, honey and other edible bee products; crop pollination services; and the sale of bees to other beekeepers.

Invasive Terrestrial Invertebrates

Insects are the most common invasive terrestrial invertebrate, an animal that lacks a vertebral column (backbone).  The National Invasive Species Information Center (NISIC) develops species profiles that provide general information about species considered to be invasive.

 

i5K Workspace@NAL

The National Agricultural Library's i5k Workspace@NAL is a platform for communities around 'orphaned' arthropod genome projects to access, visualize, curate and disseminate their data.

The Roles of Insects in Agriculture

Pollinators

Pollinators play a critical role in agriculture.  Access USDA Pollinator Offices and Initiatives, and External Federal Pollinator Partners.  Find pollinator research and data, information, media, tools, grants, and other resources.

Pollinators in Agriculture

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