Why Make Yours A Bee Garden?
Do you enjoy having a garden with diverse plants
that produce beautiful flowers and perhaps some fruits and vegetables? Do you enjoy seeing bees, butterflies
and hummingbirds visiting your flowers for nectar rewards? Do you have the feeling that your
diverse garden is in some small way contributing food resources and shelter that these animals
and other small garden creatures require? Have you ever wondered about doing more to encourage
these benign animals?
Bees (and a few other insect groups) provide a useful
service to urban plants. In return for the little floral pollen and nectar resources taken and perhaps some
small space for nesting, bees pollinate many of the flowers of our ornamental, fruit, and vegetable
plants. In some cases this service is obligatory, that is bees are absolutely necessary to
cross pollinate plants to receive mature fruits and viable seeds. Thus, they are very beneficial to
urbanites. This important service goes on largely unnoticed and uninterrupted during the flowering
season.
Some of our pollinator workshop participants and
neighborhood collaborators have recognized that their gardens are contributing a wide variety of
resources that aid in the reproduction and survival of many small-animal visitors. They also
recognize that by designing their gardens in certain ways they are providing a measure of protection
and conservation for these largely beneficial organisms.
In light of the above considerations, this website
was created to make urbanites aware of an often overlooked group
of important insects…the BEES, and especially the native bees.
The website also offers information on how urbanites can make simple
adjustments and additions to their gardens that will provide flower
food and even nest sites to aid in the survival and reproduction
of this group of insect pollinators. This information may take on
added importance for some urbanites when they realize that in a
broader context we are currently experiencing a global decline in
pollinators, and especially bees. The question of "what can
I do to help" has come up many times in our workshops. This
website can offer many suggestions to those wishing to aid bees
at a very local level, the home or community garden. (See Eric Grissell's
excellent book, Insects
and Gardens: In Pursuit of a Garden Ecology on Amazon.com)
Information presented in this website was developed
through the bee lab of Dr. Gordon Frankie of the University of California
- Berkeley and Davis. It will be updated yearly. For questions about
native bees only and their host ornamental flowers, please use the
following email address:
frankie@nature.berkeley.edu
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