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Wild Native Bees Can Pollinate Your GardenNot Enough Honeybees? Think Mason, Carpenter, and Bumble Bees
There is an impressive diversity of native bees across North America. While they don't look like your typical honey bees, they do a yeoman's job of pollinating crops.
While most U.S. crops are pollinated by honeybees, lately there’s been trouble with the important work these European bees do. There have been diseases, mites, aggressive strains of Africanized honey bees, and lately yet another major blow: colony collapse disorder. These trends are enough to make home gardeners concerned: Are there enough bees around to pollinate backyard crops and flowers? The Unsung Work of Native BeesThe answer is “yes,” but the pollination will come from a source you may not expect: wild native bees. These are the bees that farmers and growers have relied on for generations before European honeybees made landfall in North America. There is an impressive diversity of native bees across North America: over 4,000 species have been identified, ranging from one-eighth of an inch long to more than an inch long. While they may not look like a typical honeybee -- they can be dark brown, black, metallic green, blue and can have stripes not only of yellow, but also of red, white or orange -- native bees do a yeoman’s job of pollinating plants. Wild Bees Don’t Produce Honey, But do a Lot of Pollinating WorkSome names given to the bees hint at the way these bees build nests: plasterer bees, leaf-cutter bees, mason bees, carder bees, digger bees, and carpenter bees. Other names point to the way these bees look, act, or the flowers they prefer: such as cuckoo bees (that lay eggs in the nests of other bee species, much like the cuckoo bird does), sweat bees (that drink perspiration), or bumblebees (from their sound), and squash bees (that rely on cucurbits plants for their existence). These bees neither live in large communal hives nor produce enough honey to harvest. Many live in small communities in tiny holes in the ground or in wood, collect both pollen and nectar (as opposed to just nectar, as the honeybees collect), and many more live in solitary nests and raise their young alone. Because these bees don’t have a hive to defend, they are gentle, and rarely sting. Welcoming Native Bees on Your LandWith very little work on your part, you can make your backyard welcoming to these native bees. Here’s how:
For more information on native bees, visit online:ATTRA (the National Sustainable Agriculture Information Services)
The copyright of the article Wild Native Bees Can Pollinate Your Garden in Vegetable Gardens is owned by Marcia Passos Duffy. Permission to republish Wild Native Bees Can Pollinate Your Garden in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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