NPSEC News – June 27th, 2018

 

 

NPSEC News – June 27th, 2018

2018 NPACSEW Conference Agenda

Attached in the link below is the detailed agenda for the National Pesticide Applicator Certification and Safety Education Workshop (NPACSEW) in San Antonio from August 20-22, 2018. The workshop is jam-packed with a variety of important topics including WPS, C&T, pesticide registration and pesticide safety. The workshop is designed to include several breakout sessions that will lay the foundation for continuing work through Collaboration Teams post-conference.

In addition to discussing existing issues, we have set aside time to talk about emerging issues. All of the speakers will be finalized shortly, so speaker names are not listed in the agenda. We have a great group of presenters lined up and will be providing highlights of key speakers on our website.

Dr. James R. Carey, Distinguished Professor, Dept. of Entomology and Nematology at UC Davis is our first highlighted speaker and his workshop presentation is titled Powerful PowerPoint: Visualization concepts and presentation strategies. In addition to Dr. Carey’s academic research, he travels nationally and internationally to conduct workshops, some multi-day, on effectively teaching others and is skilled at translating science to non-scientists using a variety of formats and media. More about Dr. Carey can be found here.

Click Here for the Agenda

NPSEC Website

We’ve launched the NPSEC Website. There, you can find a variety of resources including training materials, forms, and educational opportunities. Additionally, our PSEPs programs page provides a useful way to get contact information for other PSEP Coordinators.

Shop the NPSEC Store

The NPSEC Store is a good place to find EPA-approved materials with expanded 2015 WPS content. This is where you can order NPSEC, PERC, WPS, and state-specific products. For PERC products, PSEPs get a 5% discount if they purchase the products using the code we mailed you at checkout. We track all PERC sales by state and send 5% of all net sales in a particular state or territory back to the PSEP as a gift.

Together We Can

Kaci Buhl, PSEP Program Coordinator at Oregon State University, had this to say about her collaboration with NPSEC:

“We had a request from the Oregon Association of Nurseries (OAN) for help teaching their members how to comply with the Worker Protection Standard (WPS). In response to the need for WPS Posters and Training DVDs, we reached out to NPSEC to be our supplier. Our funder – the SAIF Corporation, and OAN shopped around for the best price, but NPSEC provided the best value, flexibility, and was incredibly responsive to special requests. Thanks a million for having the best prices around!”

 

BREAKING NEWS – Updated Notice: Availability of WPS Training Materials

As of December 19th, 2018, WPS Pesticide Safety Training must be conducted using EPA-approved materials that have the full expanded content in the 2015 WPS. You can view the notice here.

At the NPSEC Store, you will find EPA-approved materials with expanded 2015 WPS content. To visit the NPSEC Store, please click here.

Pollinator Week, June 18 – 24!

From the Honeybee Health Coalition:

Pollinator Week is an annual celebration of the hard work honey bees and other insects and animals undertake every day to support our food and healthy ecosystems. This year the Honey Bee Health Coalition is marking the week by sharing our recent tools, resources and initiatives to support the industrious and indispensable honey bee. Read on below for more about each of these efforts and how you can help support honey bee health.

  • Varroa Guide Updates
  • Bee Integrated Demonstration Project
  • Soybean Best Management Practices
  • Hive Management Resources
  • Recommendations to USDA on private lands conservation programs
  • Varroacide Research and Testing
  • Bee Nutrition Challenge
  • Engaging stakeholders across food and agriculture

Pollinator Week is also marked by a variety of celebrations, educational opportunities, and more. Find an event near you to celebrate honey bees and learn more about how beekeepers, farmers, and everyday people are working to support bees. Our friends at the Pollinator Partnership are tracking events throughout North America on an interactive map: www.pollinator.org/pollinator-week

Varroa Guide Updates
The Coalition’s Tool for Varroa Management Guide has helped thousands of beekeepers utilize best practices for detecting, monitoring, and confronting Varroa mite infestations. Given the popularity of this landmark guide, the Coalition has regularly updated it to ensure it has the best and most up-to-date information available. The Coalition recently released the 7th edition of the guide, which you can download by visiting honeybeehealthcoalition.org/varroa.

Since its release, the Tools for Varroa Management Guide has been widely utilized to help beekeepers — in North America and beyond — monitor and control these destructive parasites. The guide has been downloaded more than 12,000 times. Be sure to share the guidethe related demonstration videos, and bee club presentation with your friends and fellow beekeepers.

Bee Integrated Demonstration Project

The Coalition’s Bee Integrated Demonstration Projectlaunched in 2017 to show best practices in a real-world setting.  Beekeepers and farmers are partnering in North Dakota to plant pollinator forage with the help of the Bee & Butterfly Habitat Fund, implement best practices from the North Dakota Pollinator Plan, and utilize the practices outlined in the Coalition’s Tools for Varroa Management Guide with support from the Bee Informed Partnership.
In 2018, the project has expanded to include additional beekeeper-farmer pairs. Learn more about the Bee Integrated Demonstration Project, its supporters and key partners, and what’s next for this exciting effort by visiting honeybeehealthcoalition.org/bee-integrated.

Soybean Best Management Practices
Pollinator habitat and the plants bees rely upon often border soybean fields throughout North America. Soybeans can be an attractive source of pollen and nectar under certain circumstances. Earlier this year, the Coalition unveiled a series of new best management practices for soybean growers to ensure they and honey bees can continue to work together to support healthy ecosystems and the crops consumers count on. These voluntary best management practices — available at honeybeehealthcoalition.org/soybmps/ — complement information already available to growers, including mandatory pesticide label instructions and advisory warnings.

Hive Management Resources
The Coalition has worked with experienced beekeepers and experts to develop and vet resources to help beekeepers — professional and amateur alike — support bee health. These resources have been a huge hit with Coalition members and others around the world.

Building on this success, Bee Culture Magazine’s Kim & Jim Show showcased the Coalition’s hive management resources in a recent webinar. Be sure to check out this great episode and share it with your friends.

Recommendations to USDA on private lands conservation programs
In May, the Coalition partnered with the Monarch Collaborative to meet with USDA Under Secretary for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Service Bill Northey in Washington, D.C. The Coalition and Monarch Collaborative highlighted the importance of the department’s private lands programs in supporting pollinator habitat on farms across the country. The two groups also urged Northey to enhance pollinator habitat in USDA private land conservation programs by improving outreach and implementation associated with these programs as well as the quality and cost-effectiveness of program specifications and habitat plantings. Click here to read the joint recommendations.

Varroacide Research and Testing
The Coalition announced in March that it has secured a more than $475,000 grant from the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research to facilitate the testing of chemical compounds that could help beekeepers more effectively treat Varroa mites. This grant, matched by participants and industry members to provide more than $1 million in total support, also will document how mites develop resistance to treatments.

The funding will support the identification, lab testing, and field testing over the next three years of “orphaned” chemical compounds that have known acaricidal (miticide) activity but have not been specifically tested against Varroa mites. Many of these compounds are trapped in a bottleneck where the costs of testing and commercializing them are too steep for testing, effectively leaving them on the shelf.

Bee Nutrition Challenge
In January, the Coalition selected four teams of researchers and innovators as the winners of the inaugural Bee Nutrition Challenge. The finalists and winners presented their ideas in a “Shark Tank”-style event at the 2018 American Bee Research Conference. Learn more about the Bee Nutrition Challenge, the winners, and information about their projects by visiting honeybeehealthcoalition.org/nutrition-challenge.

Engaging stakeholders across food and agriculture

The Coalition works throughout the year to engage with beekeepers, farmers, and supply chain members across food and agriculture.  This year, we’ve met up with farmers and beekeepers at their annual meetings and piloted a new training for crop pest advisors and applicators and a variety of events.
Most recently, we were at the Sustainable Brands conference in Vancouver discussing the critical role of bees in our food system and how consumer-facing brands can help.

Look for us next month at the Heartland Apiculture Society Meeting.

Looking ahead
The Coalition is excited to celebrate Pollinator Week and looking forward to supporting bee health year-round. Help us spread the word about our current tools, resources and initiatives – and stay tuned for more to come!

The Honey Bee Health Coalition is committed to protecting your privacy and personal data. This mailing list is used to share periodic newsletters with information about Coalition tools, resources, initiatives, events, and other information. You are receiving this email because you signed up or have been involved in related dialogues in the past. You can opt out anytime by clicking the unsubscribe button at the bottom of this or any other Honey Bee Health Coalition newsletter.