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Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club
22

Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Planting for BeesPatti KorandaISU Beekeeping Club

Page 2: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Bee + Flower = Honey

Page 3: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Bee Friendly GardensPlanting guidelineBee FriendlyWater sourcesPlant suggestion

Page 4: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Planting Guidelines Sunny location preferred Protected from the wind Several types of flowers Blooming continuously early spring to late

fall Native bees adapted best to native plants Guideline are good for other insects,

butterflies and birds too Urban area may be better that country area

Page 5: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Plant suggestions-learn about your natives Native plants are 4 times more attractive than exotic

flowers Herbs, annual, perennials, heirloom can provide good

foraging Flowers and bees help each other Allow plants to flower Dead heading plants may increase blooms Avoid hybrids with double blooms-less nectar or pollen Plants may be host to caterpillars Could be called ‘weeds’ Avoid invasive plants Some may be trees or shrubs

Page 6: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Seasonal Plan to have something is bloom all season

long – early spring, summer until late fall Plant at least 3 different types of flowers

per season Bees and Butterflies fly at different time They appreciate a garden with varieties of

flowers and long season of blooms Perennials may have a delay in a new

garden before they start blooming Annuals help to fill in bloom times before

perennials become established

Page 7: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Plant different types of flowers Plant a wide variety of flowers Plant in clumps rather than single plant The family of bees range in size

Minute sweat bees to robust carpenter bees The have different tongue lengths

Some flowers are flat, daisy like flowers Some flowers are tubular blossoms They are attracted to bright colors, blue,

white, purple They see in ultraviolet colors

Page 8: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

What Bees See We see in Red, Blue, Yellow Bees see UV, Blue, Green (think color

blind) Bees do not see Red

Page 9: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Image of UV Flowers

Page 10: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Pollination Facts 75% of plants are pollinated by animals 1/3 of out food depends on

pollinator/plant interaction Many plants cannot reproduce without

the help of pollinators Landing Platforms helpful

Page 11: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Nectar

Nectar is a sweet liquid made in special glands called nectaries that are found on flowering plants

Nectaries are most often found by the base of a flower’s petals

Nectar is the reward given to insects and small animals

Nectar is the base ingredient of honey

Page 12: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Anatomy of a Flower

Page 13: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Invasive Plantshttp://www.invasive.org/species/list.cfm?id=152

Invasive plants are ones that out compete native plants to the native detriment Thistle – bull, Canada, milk Garlic mustard Queen Anne lace Chicory Oxeye Daisy Purple Loosestrife Yellow sweet clover Multiflora rose Purple crown vetch Japanese barberry Honeysuckle-Trumpet, Japanese Oriental bittersweet

Page 14: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Bee Friendly A well run ecological garden attracts birds

and beneficial insects that help control pests

Avoid insecticides, they are non selective Fungicides are also dangerous BT-bacillus thuringiensis Neonicotinoids

An insecticidal coating on seeds to prevent insect damage

Strongly suspected of being systemic (it stays inside the plant cells, in the blooms)

Page 15: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Water Source Bees need water

Hydration-digestion, metabolism, brood, queen Temperature and humidity regulation

Bees can drown Floating Landing platform needed

Stick, log, piece of wood, water plants, cork Ponds Streams Puddles Dew Garden Water Features (fountains) Can add hive water bottle Pools are not good

Page 16: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Spring Plants Spring difficult time for native bees Urban areas typically has few early

blooming annuals Some flourish is areas that become

shady as trees leaf out * Weather inconsistent

Page 17: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Native Early Spring Bloomers Native Perennials

Columbine* Crocus-Prairie Violets Bluebells * Virginia waterleaf * Wild geranium * Wild Indigo

Weeds Dandelions

Page 18: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Native Early Spring Bloomers cont. Trees and shrubs

Fruit trees-apple peach, cherry, crabapple Dogwood – trees and shrubs Chokecherry Lilac Red Bud Raspberry Rose Serviceberry Strawberry Viburnum Willow Wild Plum Black locust

Many of these are good for birds too

Page 19: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Native Summer Bloomers Native Perennials

Beebalm Black-eyed Susan Blazing Star Clover Compass plant Cup Plant Mint Phlox Purple Cone flower Spiderwort Coreopsis (tickseed) Yarrow

Native ‘Weeds’ Butterfly Weed Milkweed

Page 20: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Additional Summer Bloomers(non native) Squash plants Pumpkins Pepper Beans Tomatoes Eggplant Potatoes Basil Cosmos Lavender Rosemary Marigolds Zinnia

Page 21: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Native Late Summer-Fall Bloomers

Native Perennials Aster Goldenrod Sunflowers

‘Weeds’ Joe-pye weed Ironweed

Page 22: Planting for Bees Patti Koranda ISU Beekeeping Club.

Credits Helpful sites Ecological Gardening.net Kelly Allsup

Horticulture Extension Educator, U of I extension

http://web.extension.illinois.edu http://beespotter.mste.illinois.edu http://

urbanext.illinois.edu/wildflowers/directory.cfm