Are almond farms a monoculture?
It’s not just almond blossoms in our orchards during bloom. To start, 42% of California almond orchards (over half a million acres) maintain native plant cover between tree rows throughout the growing season, often including blooming plants.4
What’s more, many farmers plant blooming cover crops near or within their orchards as additional food sources for bees and other pollinators with support from Project Apis m., international nonprofit Pollinator Partnership and others. Since its inception in 2013, Project Apis m.’s Seeds for Bees program has helped almond farmers add pollinator habitat to over 123,000 acres of almond orchards.5 And through Pollinator Partnership’s Bee Friendly Farming program, more than 170,000 acres of almond orchards are recognized as bee-friendly for providing diverse forage and habitat for pollinators. This represents 86% of all bee-friendly certified U.S. farms.6 Another seed program farmers participate in is the Monarch Joint Venture, an initiative to protect monarch migration patterns across the U.S. by encouraging the planting of milkweed, an important food source and habitat for monarch butterflies, on farm margins.
Beyond providing nutrition and habitat for pollinators and building biodiversity on-farm, these plantings can improve soil health, water infiltration, and increase carbon capture.