August 14
“The RIGHT STUFF”
in the Right Place -
Grant Park!
8:00pm (rain or shine)
Grant Park, Butler Field
The Genographic Project
World Community Grid
SETI@Home
Chicago Cultural Center, 6 – 7:00pm
Randolph & Michigan Aves., Chicago, 5th Fl. Millennium Park Room
Presenter: May Berenbaum, PhD, University of Illinois Professor of Entomology
The "pollinator crisis"-the widespread decline in the viability of animals that transport pollen and allow most of the planet's flowering plants to reproduce--may lack marquee appeal as a form of global change but it has real potential for profoundly altering the terrestrial world. Close to 100 crop plants in the U.S. rely on a single pollinator--the honey bee- to survive and reproduce. Over the past year, the mysterious disappearance of one-third of America's honey bees, due to what has become known as colony collapse disorder, has focused attention on how little is known about U.S. pollinators and how dependent we are upon them. May Berenbaum, Professor and Head of the Department of Entomology at the University of Illinois, will discuss the pollinator crisis, the plight of the honey bee, and advances in entomology that provide hope for the future of America's bees.
Presented by the Illinois Science Council in collaboration with the University of Illinois.