Best Practices on Insect Conservation around the world
Copyright reserved with the respective content ownersEuropean Union (EU) Pollinators Initiative
European Union (EU) agrees total ban on bee-harming pesticides (neonicotinoids, imidacloprid, clothianidin and thiamethoxam)
National Pollinator Strategy, Government of Netherlands which entails the protection of all pollinators
National Pollinator Strategy: Government of UK to bring about the best possible conditions for bees and other insects to flourish
German government’s Action Programme for Insect Protection – to improve the conservation and restoration of insect habitats
A seven-mile long “bee corridor” planted in London to boost the number of pollinating insects
Six (6) African countries (Botswana, Kenya, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Madagascar, Mozambique) have joined hands to develop an African Insect Atlas
Utrecht, a Dutch City has transformed its “Bus Stops Into Bee Stops” by converting the roofs into green roofs.
Tiny Pollinators Need “Insect Corridors” Too – The Atlantic, Jan 19, 2017
Insect conservation in South Africa