Los Angeles Times

How to be buzz worthy

- home@latimes.com

BY JANET KINOSIAN Busy as a bee is an accurate statement. ¶ According to the Xerces Society, a nonprofit organizati­on working to protect bees, 75% of the world’s food crop depends on at least one pollinator, such as the honeybee. ¶ That’s a lot riding on the journey of the humble bee and its pollinator friends. ¶ Although bee population­s have been pummeled by their share of difficulti­es in the last few years including habitat loss and the over-use of pesticides, there is something simple you can do to help: plant bee-friendly plants, says Janet Andrews of Backyard Bees, an Orange County-based group. ¶ “It’s truly as simple as that,” she says. ¶ Here are 6 ways to do just that:

1 Don’t use pesticides

Don’t use synthetic pesticides, insecticid­es and herbicides. They’re known as harmful to bees and can reduce foraging, navigating abilities, fecundity, reproducti­ve success and impair developmen­t, as well as being potentiall­y lethal, says Jessa Kay Cruz, senior pollinator conservati­on specialist for the Xerces Society.

“Limit [them] not just for bees but for all insects in your yard,” advises Lisa Gonzalez of the entomology department at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. “The vast majority of insects are beneficial or at the least benign; very few are truly problemati­c pests.” Native plants are already much less likely to have infestatio­n issues and if they do, she says, let natural predators and parasites do their job.

She also suggests purchasing plants not treated with neonicotin­oid pesticides, which Harvard researcher­s have linked to colony collapse disorder in honeybees. Ask where you purchase plants or consider the website of the environmen­tal nonprofit organizati­on Beyond Pesticides.

2 Pick the right plants

Lean toward single petal versus multi-petal plants because a single petal flower’s pollen and nectar are more accessible to bees. It’s also best to use nonhybrid plants because breeding for fancy blooms reduces much of their pollen, says Cruz.

Some natives to try, according to the California Native Society: desert mallow, any salvia (Salvia chamaedryo­ides is excellent), bush sunflowers, phacelias, flowering cactus, desert willow, sunflowers, lavender, wild lilac, woolly blue curls, sneezeweed, coffeeberr­y, sticky monkeyflow­er, California poppy, yarrow, California buckwheat and California buckeye are just a few.

3 ‘Think like a bee’

Attract bees by “thinking like a bee,” says Jaime Pawelek, a bee garden designer and researcher at UC Berkeley’s Urban Bee Lab. Entice them with food, which comes via plants in the form of pollen and nectar. The best plant choices are “native since our native bees evolved with these plants and are pre-programmed to prefer to visit them,” she says.

Plant in swathes and drifts rather than just one or two plants, say experts, so at least 3 feet of single species is best, according to Pawelek; and keep bee-friendly plants in a single area and not scattered throughout the yard. “When bees go out foraging, they like to visit the same plant over and over in order to get the rewards they’re seeking. So if you put all those plants together in one big patch, they don’t spend that much time searching,” explains Pawelek.

Make sure and plan for successive blooms season-round; honey bees forage all year and most native bees do, too, except in mid-winter.

4 Color matters

Bees have excellent color vision (they see a similar breadth of the color spectrum as humans) but it’s shifted toward ultraviole­t. “This means they find it really hard to see red; to them it is in the same wavelength as green — imagine trying to find flowers among foliage if they are all the same color,” says Cruz. Yellow, white, violet, purple and blue are all good flower colors, “though bees love Salvia ‘Hot Lips’ (red flowers) as well,” adds Pawelek.

5 Let them move in

Honeybees live in colonies and hives, but 70% of all bee species nest undergroun­d, while others use natural cavities to make their nests, says Gonzalez. So leave patches of bare or partially bare, undisturbe­d, un-tilled soil without mulch to help undergroun­d bee nesters.

For wood-and-stem-nesting bees, “this means leaving piles of branches, bamboo sections, hollow reeds, or nesting blocks made out of untreated wood,” says Guillermo Fernandez, director of the Honeybee Conservanc­y, a bee advocacy nonprofit. Steer clear of composite materials such as hardboard, chipboard or particlebo­ard as they’ll disintegra­te in rain. “Or just drill different sized holes in a block of redwood,” says Pawelek.

6 Provide water

Some bees — mainly honey bees — need water to drink (most native bees get enough water from the nectar they drink), so creating a water source is a good way to help bees remain longer in your yard. Mason bees also use water to mix with dirt to create mud for their nests.

Place the water source close to your bee-friendly plants by putting out a shallow birdbath with rocks for the bees to land on, or a shallow dish with some pebbles, marbles, sea glass or cork tops. “You’ll often see other wildlife enjoying the water,” says Fernandez. “Just make sure to change the water out often, preferably daily. You don’t want mosquito issues.”

 ?? Don Tormey Los Angeles Times ?? PLANTS such as Salvia clevelandi­i attract bees.
Don Tormey Los Angeles Times PLANTS such as Salvia clevelandi­i attract bees.

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