|
||||||
How to build a trap nest to attract and care for Orchard Mason Bees who will improve the pollination of your garden plants and flowers.
Due to Colony Collapse Disorder, many areas of the country are experiencing a decline in their honeybee population. A decline in honeybees and other social bees means a decline in pollinators, which can have an adverse affect on the gardener’s vegetable production. Maintaining a beehive is hard work. In addition, many people find the number of bees associated with a hive overwhelming for urban and suburban settings. The solitary bee, the Orchard Mason Bee (Osmia lignaria), is the ideal solution to the problem of pollination. Orchard Mason Bees are extremely gentle and will not sting unless threatened by rough handling. They are also more efficient pollinators than their cousins, the honeybee. An Orchard Mason Bee’s pollination success rate is 93%-99% as opposed to the 3% pollination success rate of honeybees. As a result, it takes fewer Orchard Mason Bees to fully pollinate an area than it takes honeybees to pollinate the same area. Attracting and maintaining an Orchard Mason Bee population is quite simple. Make sure you have plenty of flowers in your yard, build a nest, provide a mud collection site, and you will probably have success in attracting Orchard Mason Bees. Below are instructions for a simple Orchard Mason Bee’s nest. Supplies
Instructions
Ideas and Suggestions
SuppliersTo purchase Orchard Mason Bees or to buy pre-made Orchard Mason Bee Houses contact Knox Cellars: Native Bee Pollinators or Beediverse: The Mason Bee People.
The copyright of the article How to Build Orchard Mason Bee Nests in Organic Gardens is owned by Melissa Howard. Permission to republish How to Build Orchard Mason Bee Nests in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||