The Peterborough Examiner

Bee houses for our neighbourh­ood bees

GREENUP COLUMN: There are more than 350 species of bees in the GTA, contributi­ng to Ontario’s ecosystems

- MARCY ADZICH SPECIAL TO THE EXAMINER Marcy Adzich is the manager of Green UP landscape programs. Learn more at greenup.on.ca.

Over the past few years, more people are transformi­ng their yards from lawn to a more wildlifefr­iendly landscape, which provides a healthier habitat for many species including wild bees.

Did you know that wild bees pollinate most of our backyard fruits, berries and vegetables? The Xerces Society states, the ecological service native bees provide is necessary for the reproducti­on of over 85 per cent of the world’s flowering plants, including more than two-thirds of the world’s crop species.

In 2011, more than 350 species of bees were documented in the Greater Toronto Area. It was estimated that an average yard in the GTA hosted 50 bee species actively nesting or foraging. Wild bees are mostly solitary in nature, and like honeybees, they struggle to maintain their population­s due to urbanizati­on, pollution, invasive species, habitat loss and disease.

About 70 per cent of Ontario’s wild bees nest in the ground in hidden spots such as underneath cracks in the sidewalk, in rotting logs, or in gravel and sandy areas. Some of our city’s worn footpaths and bare roadsides have created suitable nesting sites for ground nesting, wild bees who seek a certain type of soil and compaction for laying eggs. Wild bees appreciate you leaving a few bare patches of ground in your garden, so they can create a nesting site close to their foraging source.

About 30 per cent of Ontario’s wild bees are cavity dwellers meaning that solitary, female bees must find narrow, hollow crevices to lay their eggs in single rows. Eggs are placed within a pollen ball containing pollen and nectar and are usually round or oval in shape. Depending on the type of bee, the eggs are segmented from one other with mud mixtures, waterproof­ing plant cellulose, or leaf material collected by nearby plants.

Females lay an egg, close the cell, and repeat the process until the hollow cavity is full. It takes several weeks for the eggs to hatch. The larvae then consume the pollen and nectar ball, and then each larvae metamorpho­ses into an adult bee.

Bees are very industriou­s insects and will search high and low for the right nest site to raise their young. In urban settings, bees sometimes consider additional nest sites, such as at the base of fire hydrants, in strategica­lly placed drinking straws and in tunnels burrowed into decks. While these nest sites are sometimes a bit of an inconvenie­nce for us, they are crucial to allow females to raise the next generation of pollinator­s.

Last summer at the GreenUP office, one of our staff members had a big surprise when she opened her desk drawer. Inside, several leafcutter bees were crawling around. How did they get there? After the leafcutter bees were safely moved outside, we discovered a hollow section of garden hose inside the drawer - it had been used the season before as a tree guard. Before it was removed from the tree and brought into the office, a female leafcutter bee thought this hose was an ideal nesting site and had laid her eggs within it!

Making a simple bee house is a wonderful way observe these remarkable pollinator­s in your yard (instead of inside your home or office). Depending on the time of year, season, and even the time of day, your bee house will be frequented by a variety of bees making it easy to closely study their unique characteri­stics.

Wild bee houses can be made with natural hollow, straw-like materials of varying diameters (ranging from 3 mm to 10 mm) and lengths (ranging from 10 cm to 30 cm). Simply bundle them tightly together and secure them in a nook of a tree branch, or shrub.

Some bee houses are similar in size and shape to a small birdhouse and contain removable reeds, cardboard and paper tube inserts, bamboo rods, or twigs. Wild bee houses can also be made from untreated, solid wood logs or blocks drilled with varying diameter holes for bee nesting.

Unlike honeybees that regenerate their population throughout the season, only a few wild bees in our region live for more than one generation per year and species are rarely seen for more than a onemonth period. The majority of our wild, solitary bees spend the winter as fully grown larvae within the nesting cavity, emerging once per year in sync with the timing of the flowers they provide pollinatio­n services for.

This time of year, many wild bees, including bumblebees, are in a state called diapause, which is a type of hibernatio­n that lasts until the weather warms up. This is a perfect time to make some bee houses and have them prepared to install early April.

GreenUP and The Endeavour Centre are hosting a workshop, Build Your Own Bee Hotel on April 16. In this workshop, participan­ts will receive hands on instructio­n building a bee house, with a few designs to select from. Participan­ts will also learn more about Peterborou­gh’s wild bees and pollinator-friendly plants, and will be introduced to GreenUP’s new Native Bee Share citizen science program, which will monitor cavity nesting bee numbers, nesting patterns, and pests and diseases, while stewarding and restoring pollinator habitat.

For more informatio­n about the Build Your Own Bee Hotel workshop and the GreenUP Native Bee Share program, visit greenup. on.ca.

For more informatio­n and resources about pollinator conservati­on and wild bees in our region visit The Xerces Society for Invertebra­te Conservati­on, The City of Toronto Biodiversi­ty Booklet Series, Feed The Bees, and the Farms at Work Native Bee Resources.

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