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Planning for spring's garden? Bees like variety and don't care about your neighbors' yards

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Credit: Lilla Frerichs/public domain

In order to reproduce, most flowering plants rely on animals to move their pollen. In turn, pollinators rely on flowers for food, including both nectar and pollen. If you're a gardener, you might want to support this partnership by planting flowers. But if you live in an area without a lot of green space, you might wonder whether it's worth the effort.

I . My shows that bees, in particular, don't really care about the landscape surrounding flower gardens. They seem to zero in on the particular types of flowers they like, no matter what else is around.

To design a garden that supports the greatest number and diversity of pollinators, don't worry about what your neighbors are doing or not doing. Just focus on planting different kinds of flowers—and lots of them.

Comparing different landscapes

To test whether bees are more plentiful in , and I planted identical gardens—roughly 10 feet by 6½ feet (3 x 2 meters)—in five different landscapes around eastern Tennessee that ranged from cattle pastures and organic farms to a and an arboretum. All five gardens were planted in March of 2019 and contained 18 species of native perennials from the mint, sunflower and pea families.

Over the course of the flowering season, we surveyed pollinators by collecting the insects that landed on the flowers, so we could count and identify them. The sampling took place in a carefully standardized way. Each week we sampled every in every garden, in every landscape, for five minutes each. We used a modified, hand-held vacuum we called the "Bug Vac" and repeated this sampling every week that flowers were in bloom for three years.

We wanted to test whether the area immediately surrounding the gardens—the floral neighborhood—made a difference in pollinator abundance, diversity and identity. So we also surveyed the area around the gardens, in a radius of about 160 feet (roughly 50 meters).

To our surprise, we found the on the abundance, diversity and composition of the pollinators coming to our test gardens. Instead, they were mostly determined by the number and type of flowers. Otherwise, pollinators were remarkably similar at all sites. A sunflower in a cattle pasture had, by and large, the same number and types of visitors as a sunflower in a botanical garden.

Menu planning for pollinators

We used native in our study because there's evidence they for flower-visiting insects. We chose from three plant families because each offers different nourishment.

Plants in the mint family (Lamiaceae), for example, and have easily accessible flowers that attract a wide variety of insects. I'd recommend including plants from the mint family if you want to provide a large and diverse group of insects energy for flight. If you live in Tennessee, some examples are mountain mint, wood mint and Cumberland rosemary. You can easily native to your area.

While some pollinators enjoy nectar, others get all their fat and protein from . Flowers from the sunflower family (Asteraceae), including asters and coreopsis, offer large quantities of both pollen and nectar and also have . Plants from this family are good for a range of pollinators, including many , such as the blue-eyed, long-horned bee (Melissodes denticulatus), which feasts primarily on ironweed (Vernonia fasciculata), also a member of the sunflower family.

If you want to offer flowers that have the highest protein content to nourish the next generation of strong pollinators, consider plants from the pea family (Fabaceae), such as dwarf indigo, false indigo and bush clover. Some of the plants in this family do not even offer nectar as a reward. Instead, they provide high protein pollen that's . If you include plants from the pea family in your garden, you may observe fewer visitors, but they will be receiving pollen with high protein levels.

Selecting a few native perennials from each of these three families, all widely available in garden centers, is a good place to start. Just as a diversity of food is important for human health, a mixture of flower types offers pollinators a varied and . Interestingly, the diversity of human diets is directly linked to pollinators, because most of the color and variety in human diets comes from plants pollinated by insects.

Plant it and they will come

Maybe you've heard that in number and variety. This issue is of particular concern for humans, who rely on insects and other animals to pollinate food crops. Pollinators are indeed facing many threats, from .

Thankfully, gardeners can provide an incredible service to these valuable animals just by planting more flowers. As our research shows, small patches of garden can help boost pollinators—even when the surrounding landscape has few resources for them. The one constant in all our research is that insects love flowers. The more flowers and the more types of flowers, the more Earth will have.

Provided by The Conversation

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Citation: Planning for spring's garden? Bees like variety and don't care about your neighbors' yards (2025, January 7) retrieved 10 June 2025 from /news/2025-01-garden-bees-variety-dont-neighbors.html
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