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bees

Get the Buzz on Honeybees at the Upcoming EMG Garden Tour

May 26, 2015

honey beeYou’ve likely heard that beekeeping, or apiculture, is a growing trend among gardeners who want to help stem the alarming rate of decline in honeybee populations. For the last two decades, bee populations have been under serious pressure from a mystery problem called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD). Experts disagree as to the exact cause, but it appears to render honeybees more susceptible to a host of pathogens, stemming from nutrition problems from lack of diversity in available pollen and nectar sources and possible sub-lethal effects of pesticides.

honey bee with pollen loadIf you’re concerned about the fate of honeybees, you will enjoy visiting one of the gardens featured on this year’s EMG Garden Tour, which features an apiary. Even if you’ve decided that apiculture isn’t for you, you can still learn how to use your landscape to help local bee populations find forage.

Honeybees gather nectar and pollen from flowers, a process called pollination, to make honey. It’s fascinating to watch honeybees visiting flowers with their back legs laden with bright yellow pollen bundles!bee-flower

To attract bees, plant a diverse array of native wildflowers and avoid pesticides. Honeybees are particularly attracted to flowers with a single row of petals such as asters, cosmos, marigolds, sunflowers and zinnias. Yellow, white, blue and purple flowers attract bees more than pinks, oranges and reds, yet an environment of year-round, uninterrupted bloom creates the ideal environment for honeybee colony reproduction. Don’t forget to also let some herbs and vegetables go to flower for the honeybees!

European_honeybeeIf you grow edibles, thank honeybees for pollinating tree fruits, nuts, many vegetables and melons. It’s estimated that honeybees are responsible for one-third of everything that people eat every day!

 

Article written by Alison Arnold, Extension Agent, Agriculture, Consumer Horticulture, Master Gardener Volunteers.

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Categories Beneficial Insects, Pollinator Gardens Tags bees, honeybees

Swarming Bees in April

March 31, 2014

It’s spring, and birds are rushing worms and bugs back to their open-mouthed hatchlings.  Fields are dotted with cows, sheep, and  goats nursing their young new generations of life; both plant and animal abound.  But for honeybees, reproducing is not about the queen laying eggs and raising more bees.

courtesy of Kansas State University Extension Entomology Department
courtesy of Kansas State University Extension Entomology Department

Honeybees are a fascinating example of a highly social insect where the entire colony of 10,000 to 50,000 bees is just one super organism.  Honeybees reproduce by splitting the single colony into two colonies and they do that by swarming.

April is the height of ‘swarm season’ when large, healthy colonies send out the old, original queen with about half of the population to find a new home. A new queen is raised in the original hive . . . and voila–two colonies.

But many swarms die in the wild, so if you see a honeybee swarm (a tight ‘ball’ of bees hanging in a tight cluster, sometimes from trees, but they will also cling to any fixed object like picnic benches, fences, automobile fenders)  –  call the Extension office ( 828/255-5522) and we will give you numbers for local beekeepers eager to capture it.

Note:  Since honeybees only sting to defend their home, swarms generally are quite harmless. The bees are much less defensive, plus they are stuffed full of honey that they packed for their trip to a new hive and cannot physically flex to sting you.

Article written by Diane Almond, Extension Master Gardener Volunteer.

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Categories Beneficial Insects Tags bees, colony, entomology, swarm

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