-
Treasure Valley Project plants 64,000 pollinator plants and sparks conservation.
-
Easy-to-grow flowers help bees and butterflies in Idaho.
-
Growth and climate change are hurting pollinators in Idaho.
-
One woman's quest to live off the land and give bees, birds, and butterflies a home.
-
We take a tour of an urban community garden that neighbors are turning into a haven for bees, butterflies and birds.
-
We take a backyard safari to find an animal that has managed to adapt to rapid human growth — the beaver — and to learn about dozens of species thriving in our own backyards.
-
Growth is changing the landscape in the Treasure Valley from fields and farmland to buildings and homes. As the fields disappear, so do the plants and flowers that bees, butterflies and other pollinators need to survive. A new project aims to bring back those flowers and the pollinators they rely on.
-
Bees and other pollinators are on the decline in southern Idaho. Idaho Matters is continuing our look at this issue with a special focus on bees and their importance to our ecosystem.
-
Idaho Matters learns about the importance of bee pollinators from Melanie Kirby, a queen bee breeder with Zia Queenbee Company and biologist and farmer Katrina Blair.
-
In January, we told you about a new project designed to bring back declining pollinators to the Treasure Valley. The idea is to bring bees and butterflied…