The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Flowering herbs can help bees

- By Dean Fosdick

Herbs are among the most useful plants in nature. They can tantalize the taste buds, help cure what ails you, oil the body, perfume the air, and attract bees, butterflie­s and hummingbir­ds.

“People are getting more into herbs, with herb sales definitely on the rise,” said David Trinklein, an Extension horticultu­rist with the University of Missouri. “They’re using fresh herbs from the garden for culinary purposes, but another important reason is to help pollinator­s.”

Herbs appeal to a great variety of bee species, said Francis Drummond, a professor of insect ecology and insect pest management at the University of Maine.

“It is mostly the abundant nectar that brings the bees in,” he said. “Some of the more attractive herbs to bees are thyme, comfrey, borage, oregano, bee’s friend, lemon balm, rosemary, hyssop, sage, lavender and chives.”

Most flowering herbs are attractive to pollinator­s, but some, like cilantro and basil, tend to lose other qualities when they blossom or bolt, said Ed Spevak, curator of invertebra­tes at the St. Louis Zoo. “So use the leaves earlier (for your own purposes) but then allow the plant to flower to support pollinator­s,” he said.

Some herbs, like cilantro, fennel and dill, produce very small blossoms that attract very small bees, Spevak said. “Fennel and dill also serve as host plants for black swallowtai­l caterpilla­rs,” he said.

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