The Jefferson Exchange

How Oregon cut pesticide-related bee deaths

14 min · Gestern
Episode How Oregon cut pesticide-related bee deaths Cover

Beschreibung

Nomada vegana is a bee species found in Central and North America. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/960bb62/2147483647/strip/false/crop/6000x4000+0+0/resize/792x528!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F40%2F71%2Fda4ab21242dbb71d15038b2ab798%2Fstelis072018.jpg] Nomada vegana is a bee species found in Central and North America. (Andony Melathopoulos, Ph.D. / Oregon State University) Oregon has not recorded a confirmed pesticide-related bee kill since 2020, according to Oregon State University researchers. Recent data shows bee pesticide poisonings have declined significantly over the past decade. Researchers attribute much of that progress to education efforts aimed at helping pesticide applicators reduce risks to pollinators while managing pests. Since the creation of Oregon's Pollinator Health Task Force in 2013, Oregon State University has trained about 13,000 licensed pesticide applicators. Researchers said the program focuses on helping professionals identify situations that pose the greatest risk to bees and adjust their practices accordingly. Recent data highlights a significant downward trend in bee pesticide poisonings across Oregon over the last decade. Following the formation of a state pollinator health task force in 2013, Oregon State University (OSU) has led a massive educational effort, training approximately 13,000 licensed pesticide applicators. Andony Melathopoulos, an Oregon State University associate professor of pollinator health, said the training helps applicators balance pest management needs with pollinator protection. While pesticide-related bee deaths have declined, honeybees continue to face other threats, including Varroa mites, viruses and poor nutrition. Ramesh Sagili, director of the Oregon State University Honey Bee Lab, said maintaining healthy colonies is critical to supporting Oregon's beekeeping and pollination industries, which contribute more than $500 million annually to the state's economy. "We have to have those strong robust colonies for meeting the needs for pollination and, of course, as beekeepers that's their bread and butter, so we want them to thrive as well," Sagili said. Oregon's commercial hive losses currently stand at about 25%, compared with a national average of 35%. Beyond honeybees, Oregon State University researchers are documenting the state's wild bee populations through the Oregon Bee Atlas. Researchers have identified more than 560 species so far and believe the total could eventually reach 900. The project is supported by the nation's largest Master Melittologist program and aims to map where wild bee species live across Oregon to help researchers monitor and protect their populations. Residents can support pollinators by planting native species and participating in programs such as Bee Stewards through Oregon State University's Extension Service. GUEST * Andony Melathopoulos [https://extension.oregonstate.edu/people/andony-melathopoulos], associate professor of pollinator health, Oregon State University * Ramesh Sagili [https://honeybeelab.oregonstate.edu/users/ramesh-sagili?gid=67801], associate professor of apiculture, Oregon State University

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Episode California condor flies into Southern Oregon for first time in more than a century Cover

California condor flies into Southern Oregon for first time in more than a century

Yurok Wildlife Department Technician Sandra Hahn releases B9 into the Northern California Condor Restoration Program’s (NCCRP) condor release and management facility. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/ac2cc5a/2147483647/strip/false/crop/3000x1736+0+0/resize/792x458!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F0f%2F38%2F386f83424c12bd9752d51acd7b55%2Fcondor-b9.jpg]Yurok Wildlife Department Technician Sandra Hahn releases B9 into the Northern California Condor Restoration Program’s (NCCRP) condor release and management facility. (Matt Mais ) A young California condor has become the first of its species recorded in Southern Oregon in more than a century after completing a nearly 400-mile flight from Northern California, according to the Yurok Tribe's condor restoration program. The bird, known as B9, is a 2-year-old female released through the Northern California Condor Restoration Program [https://www.yuroktribe.org/yurok-condor-restoration-program]. Her journey took her from Northern California near Redding, across the Oregon border south of Medford, through the Cave Junction area and along the Southern Oregon Coast before returning home. B9's flight is believed to be the first documented visit by a California condor to Southern Oregon since the late 1800s or early 1900s. The sighting is being celebrated by the Yurok Tribe and conservation partners as evidence that the restored population is expanding its range. Tiana Williams-Claussen, director of the Yurok Tribe Wildlife Department, said B9's flight reflects the natural curiosity of a young condor exploring its range. "She followed her instincts as a young, curious sort of creature," Williams-Claussen said. The flight marks a milestone for a restoration effort aimed at returning California condors to the region. The Yurok Tribe began working to restore the species in 2008 and released its first condors in partnership with Redwood National Park in 2022. Today, 23 condors are flying free in Northern California. Williams-Claussen said condors hold deep cultural significance for the Yurok people, who view them as an important part of ceremonies and world renewal traditions. She described the birds' return as helping restore both ecological and cultural connections that were lost when condors disappeared from the region. California condors are the largest birds in North America, with wingspans more than nine feet. They can travel 100 to 200 miles in a day and are known for soaring long distances on wind currents. Williams-Claussen said B9's journey also shows how younger birds are learning from older condors already established in the wild. "Every subsequent cohort of birds that we've brought out has been able to build on that original knowledge that those first four birds brought to expand the range farther and farther," she said. GUEST * Tiana Williams-Claussen, director, Yurok Tribe Wildlife Department [https://www.yuroktribe.org/wildlife]

Gestern15 min
Episode How Oregon cut pesticide-related bee deaths Cover

How Oregon cut pesticide-related bee deaths

Nomada vegana is a bee species found in Central and North America. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/960bb62/2147483647/strip/false/crop/6000x4000+0+0/resize/792x528!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F40%2F71%2Fda4ab21242dbb71d15038b2ab798%2Fstelis072018.jpg] Nomada vegana is a bee species found in Central and North America. (Andony Melathopoulos, Ph.D. / Oregon State University) Oregon has not recorded a confirmed pesticide-related bee kill since 2020, according to Oregon State University researchers. Recent data shows bee pesticide poisonings have declined significantly over the past decade. Researchers attribute much of that progress to education efforts aimed at helping pesticide applicators reduce risks to pollinators while managing pests. Since the creation of Oregon's Pollinator Health Task Force in 2013, Oregon State University has trained about 13,000 licensed pesticide applicators. Researchers said the program focuses on helping professionals identify situations that pose the greatest risk to bees and adjust their practices accordingly. Recent data highlights a significant downward trend in bee pesticide poisonings across Oregon over the last decade. Following the formation of a state pollinator health task force in 2013, Oregon State University (OSU) has led a massive educational effort, training approximately 13,000 licensed pesticide applicators. Andony Melathopoulos, an Oregon State University associate professor of pollinator health, said the training helps applicators balance pest management needs with pollinator protection. While pesticide-related bee deaths have declined, honeybees continue to face other threats, including Varroa mites, viruses and poor nutrition. Ramesh Sagili, director of the Oregon State University Honey Bee Lab, said maintaining healthy colonies is critical to supporting Oregon's beekeeping and pollination industries, which contribute more than $500 million annually to the state's economy. "We have to have those strong robust colonies for meeting the needs for pollination and, of course, as beekeepers that's their bread and butter, so we want them to thrive as well," Sagili said. Oregon's commercial hive losses currently stand at about 25%, compared with a national average of 35%. Beyond honeybees, Oregon State University researchers are documenting the state's wild bee populations through the Oregon Bee Atlas. Researchers have identified more than 560 species so far and believe the total could eventually reach 900. The project is supported by the nation's largest Master Melittologist program and aims to map where wild bee species live across Oregon to help researchers monitor and protect their populations. Residents can support pollinators by planting native species and participating in programs such as Bee Stewards through Oregon State University's Extension Service. GUEST * Andony Melathopoulos [https://extension.oregonstate.edu/people/andony-melathopoulos], associate professor of pollinator health, Oregon State University * Ramesh Sagili [https://honeybeelab.oregonstate.edu/users/ramesh-sagili?gid=67801], associate professor of apiculture, Oregon State University

Gestern14 min
Episode Oakland, Oregon, moved itself to survive. Its residents are still preserving it Cover

Oakland, Oregon, moved itself to survive. Its residents are still preserving it

Historic buildings in Oakland, Oregon, the first city on Oregon's Historic Register. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/eab5f68/2147483647/strip/false/crop/1334x831+0+0/resize/792x493!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F49%2F3e%2F687c2d324a4cae3c0ea2ef731dfe%2Foakland-oregon.png]Historic buildings in Oakland, Oregon, the first city on Oregon's Historic Register.(https://www.umpquavalleywineries.org/discover-oakland-oregon-a-historic-gem-emerging-as-a-wine-destination/ ) Most towns grow around the railroad. Oakland, Oregon, took a different approach: It moved to meet it. Founded in 1852, the Douglas County community later relocated its town center about 1.5 miles to connect with the railroad. "They actually moved the entire town, rolling down on logs and with oxen," Mayor Bette Keehley said. More than 170 years later, that unusual history continues to shape Oakland. The town's leaders have worked to preserve its historic downtown while navigating the challenges of maintaining infrastructure and services in a small rural community. "We need to preserve our historic district because that's really all that Oakland has as a calling card to the rest of the world," Keehley said. Located north of Roseburg, Oakland has fewer than 1,000 residents but a history that remains central to its identity. Keehley jokingly calls it "the other Oakland, the better Oakland." That history is evident throughout downtown. Oakland was the first city listed on Oregon's State Historic Preservation Office register and maintains strict standards designed to preserve its 19th-century character. While building interiors can be modernized, exterior changes must maintain the historic appearance. The town's historic look has even attracted Hollywood. Parts of the 1993 film "Fire in the Sky" and the 1991 film "Grand Tour" were filmed in Oakland. But preserving a historic town has not insulated it from modern challenges. In recent years, Oakland has faced severe snowstorms and the Archie Creek Fire, which damaged the watershed feeding Calapooya Creek, the town's sole water source. Keehley credited Public Works Director Jim Hart with helping the city navigate complex federal disaster recovery programs and secure funding for infrastructure repairs. "If we had not sought funding from FEMA, we would have already been bankrupt," she said. Bette Keehly, mayor, Oakland, Oregon [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/4d16f7d/2147483647/strip/false/crop/104x127+0+0/resize/104x127!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F99%2F41%2F35297f32452a8d2012ec78045c0f%2Foakland-oregon-mayor-bette-keehly.png]Bette Keehly, mayor, Oakland, Oregon (City of Oakland, Oregon ) “We need to preserve our historic district because that’s really all that Oakland has as a calling card to the rest of the world,” Keehley said. The world did come calling in the 1990s when the town was selected as the location for a couple of Hollywood films. The 1993 film, Fire in the Sky [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106912/?ref_=sr_t_1] told the story of an Arizona logger who disappeared for several days after encountering a UFO. Grand Tour [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0104362/?ref_=sr_t_2]was filmed in 1991 and starred Jeff Daniels. However, maintaining a historic town comes with modern challenges. Recent years have brought critical environmental challenges, including damaging snowstorms and the Archie Creek fire, which devastated the watershed for Calapooya Creek—the town’s only water source. Keehley credits Public Works Director Jim Hart as a "godsend" for navigating complex FEMA regulations to save the town’s infrastructure. “If we had not sought funding from FEMA, we would have already been bankrupt,” she said. Keehley, who has served as mayor for 17 years, said she originally ran for office to help stabilize a dysfunctional City Council. Since then, she said, Oakland has weathered repeated economic and environmental challenges, including the boom-and-bust cycles common to small rural communities. GUEST * Bette Keehley, Oakland, Oregon Mayor

Gestern15 min
Episode How fines from Eureka’s red-light district helped pay city bills Cover

How fines from Eureka’s red-light district helped pay city bills

The mugshot of Janice Murray is part of a historic collection of images, data and artifacts from the early 20th century when Eureka, California benefited annually from significant amounts of funds it extracted from the city's "Red Light District." Sex workers helped subsidize police salaries and build the town's infrastructure. Today, efforts are underway to build a public monument memorializing the contributions of these unknown women whose sex work supported the development of Eureka during the early 20th century. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/058a004/2147483647/strip/false/crop/1130x803+0+0/resize/743x528!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F8e%2Fed%2F0cc33edf4e5d998ece85b6dbb235%2Feureka-red-light-district-janice-murray-mug-shot.png]The mugshot of Janice Murray is part of a historic collection of images, data and artifacts from the early 20th century when Eureka, California benefited annually from significant amounts of funds it extracted from the city's "Red Light District." Sex workers helped subsidize police salaries and build the town's infrastructure. Today, efforts are underway to build a public monument memorializing the contributions of these unknown women whose sex work supported the development of Eureka during the early 20th century. (Eureka Police Department Mug Books / Humboldt County Historical Society ) More than a century ago, women in Eureka’s red-light district were quietly helping fund the city itself. Now a historian and the mayor want their role in the city’s history publicly recognized. In 1903, the city of Eureka, California [https://www.eurekaca.gov/], had only $1,156 in cash on hand. That same year, workers in the local red-light district contributed $840 to the city treasury — nearly matching the city’s entire reserves. Historian Lynette Mullen said the payments were part of a system that operated in Eureka during the early 1900s. Police would warn brothel operators about upcoming arrests. The women would then plead guilty and forfeit their bail, sending the money into city accounts. Between 1900 and 1914, sex workers in the district contributed nearly $14,000 to the city’s general fund — the equivalent of about $500,000 today. City officials used the money to pay bills, fund police salaries and pave streets. By 1909, Mullen said, the volume of fines was so large that the money sometimes overflowed the tables where it was counted. At the time, state law prohibited prostitution, but Eureka maintained a designated district where the industry operated. Despite their role in the city’s finances, the workers themselves were largely absent from official records. Mullen said that omission overlooks their agency. The proposed monument is being supported by the Ink People Center for the Arts [https://www.inkpeople.org/dreammaker-data/monument-to-eurekas-red-light-women]. Mullen said she was working with Eureka Mayor Kim Bergel to establish a physical monument recognizing the women and their contributions to the city. GUEST * Lynette Mullen, historian

Gestern15 min
Episode Pacific Northwest news: How smokejumpers, tribes and students are caring for Northwest ecosystems Cover

Pacific Northwest news: How smokejumpers, tribes and students are caring for Northwest ecosystems

A man steps into a Forest Service airplane. [https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/1a05e9e/2147483647/strip/false/crop/5791x3861+0+0/resize/792x528!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F08%2Fde%2Fb5275c734f078f2fd4358c49bc06%2Fdsc00509.jpg]Smokejumper Matthew West steps into a Short C-23 Sherpa at a U.S> Forest Service base in Redding.(Justin Higginbottom / JPR ) This week, we explore three stories from across the Pacific Northwest, examining the people, places and projects shaping the region's environment. A new class of cadets learns to climb trees and sew to become smokejumpers [https://www.ijpr.org/wildfire/2026-05-31/a-new-class-of-cadets-learn-to-climb-trees-and-sew-to-become-smokejumpers] At California's Redding Smokejumper Base, a new class of cadets recently completed a demanding six-week training program to join the ranks of firefighters who parachute into remote wildfires. In addition to learning to jump from C-23 Sherpa aircraft, recruits train in specialized skills such as tree climbing and industrial sewing, making their own jumpsuits. With levee breached, Siuslaw Estuary connects to its past life as a sanctuary for salmon, lamprey and tule [https://www.klcc.org/environment/2026-06-03/with-levee-breached-siuslaw-estuary-connects-to-its-past-life-as-a-sanctuary-for-salmon-lamprey-and-tule] Near Florence, Oregon, a 15-year restoration effort reached a milestone when crews breached an earthen levee at the former Waite Ranch, reconnecting former dairy farmland to the Siuslaw estuary. Led by the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians and partner organizations, the project restored habitat for salmon and lamprey and created a cultural gathering place, where tribal members can practice traditions such as returning salmon remains to the water. PacWave makes the most of funding delays by sparking curiosity in scientists, students [https://www.klcc.org/science-technology/2026-06-01/pacwave-makes-the-most-of-funding-delays-by-sparking-curiosity-in-scientists-students] Off the coast of Newport, Oregon, students from Oregon Coast Community College recently joined scientists aboard the research vessel Pacific Storm to collect seafloor sediment samples at the PacWave South wave-energy test site. By sorting through mud samples for marine organisms such as clams and worms, students helped researchers monitor seafloor ecology while gaining hands-on experience with marine science and ocean research.

8. Juni 202614 min