HOW to Grow a Bee Friendly Garden Actforbees.Org

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HOW to Grow a Bee Friendly Garden Actforbees.Org Did you know that bees pollinate Download our free ‘Love Food? much of the food that makes our Love Bees!’ curriculum units for Early Learning, Year 5/6 and Year 9/10 diet tasty and healthy and they also created with Cool Australia and aligned pollinate food for birds and small with the Australian National Curriculum. mammals. actforbees.org/resources/curriculum/ Help promote bee friendly gardening Bees around the world are in serious in your neighbourhood by downloading trouble due to the loss of habitat and a free Bee Friendly Garden sign for your food sources, use of toxic pesticides front garden. and modern agricultural practices. To find out more ways you can help our busy buzzing friends visit actforbees.org You can help by planting a bee friendly garden and using alternatives HOW TO grow to pesticides in your garden, schools, a bee friendly businesses and our public spaces. garden Let’s be a Bee Friendly Australia! ACtforbees.org All information accurate at time of printing © ACT FOR BEES HOW TO grow a bee friendly garden STEP 1 STEP 2 STEP 3 Plan and plant Avoid the Watch the bees buzz your garden nasties and your garden thrive Here are just a few suggestions to help you Neonicotinoids are a group of There are many natural ways to get started. A more detailed planting guide widely used systemic pesticides create balance in your garden and is available at actforbees.org/resources/ that are harmful to bees. help bees and insect pollinators gardening-for-bees/ They are used on farms, thrive including companion as well as around our homes, Herbs are the bee’s medicine chest. Let them planting and mulching. Attract schools and city landscapes. flower for as long as possible. Basil, Perennial the pest control team of ladybirds, Basil, Borage, Comfrey, Coriander, Dill, At sublethal levels they affect bee’s immune lizards, small birds and beneficial Echinacea, Lavender, Lemon Balm, Marjoram, systems and can also disorientate the bees predator insects by planting all Mints, Oregano, Parsley, Rosemary, Thyme, so they can’t return to the hive. flowers and avoiding pesticides. Sage, Rocket, Verbena. Avoid products that contain Acetamidprid, Flowers are enjoyed by everyone. Imidacloprid, Clothianidin, Thiamethodoxam BUILD YOUR VERY Clover, Dandelions, Marigolds, Nasturtiums, Some common brand names to avoid Sunflowers. OWN INSECT HOTEL All Confidor (Yates) Insecticides Insect hotels offer a home Native plants are good sources of nectar, Amgrow Rose Spray Advanced for native bees and other including Grevillea, Eucalyptus, Banksia, Sharp Shooter Complete Bug and Insect Spray insect pollinators. Brachyschome, Bottlebrush, Tea Trees and Yates Rose Gun Advanced Westringia. Some species of Grevillea and Yates Complete Lawn and Garden Insecticide Learn how to build Callistemon can flower twice a year. Wattles your own hotel at Ask before you buy plants what chemical provide good pollen particularly in early spring. actforbees.org//resources/australian- treatments have been used on them. native-bees/ Fruit trees Apples, Pears, Citrus and Stonefruit. Further information about how to grow Vegetables when allowed to go to seed offer a bee friendly garden together with a detailed extra nutrition to bees, birds and other insects. planting guide is available at actforbees.org/resources/gardening-for-bees/.
Recommended publications
  • Pollination and Botanic Gardens Contribute to the Next Issue of Roots
    Botanic Gardens Conservation International Education Review Volume 17 • Number 1 • May 2020 Pollination and botanic gardens Contribute to the next issue of Roots The next issue of Roots is all about education and technology. As this issue goes to press, most botanic gardens around the world are being impacted by the spread of the coronavirus Covid-19. With many Botanic Gardens Conservation International Education Review Volume 16 • Number 2 • October 2019 Citizen gardens closed to the public, and remote working being required, Science educators are having to find new and innovative ways of connecting with visitors. Technology is playing an ever increasing role in the way that we develop and deliver education within botanic gardens, making this an important time to share new ideas and tools with the community. Have you developed a new and innovative way of engaging your visitors through technology? Are you using technology to engage a Botanic Gardens Conservation International Education Review Volume 17 • Number 1 • April 2020 wider audience with the work of your garden? We are currently looking for a variety of contributions including Pollination articles, education resources and a profile of an inspirational garden and botanic staff member. gardens To contribute, please send a 100 word abstract to [email protected] by 15th June 2020. Due to the global impacts of COVID-19, BGCI’s 7th Global Botanic Gardens Congress is being moved to the Australian spring. Join us in Melbourne, 27 September to 1 October 2021, the perfect time to visit Victoria. Influence and Action: Botanic Gardens as Agents of Change will explore how botanic gardens can play a greater role in shaping our future.
    [Show full text]
  • FESTIVAL MISSOURI American Water
    OCEANIC: 26th ANNUAL CONTINENTAL: FESTIVAL MISSOURI American Water ECOSYSTEM: COMMUNITY: MEDIA: THE Gateway ® Your GuideGardener to Enjoyable Gardening and Easy-Care Landscapes The Healthy Planet St. Louis’ Natural Living Magazine www.thehealthyplanet.com • • NEIGHBORHOOD AND EARTH DAY ADVOCATES: APRIL 26 2015 10AM – 6PM Ameren Missouri Pure Power I Banfield Pet Hospital I Better Life I BOLT Construction ChooseBranson I Farmer Girl Meats I Great Rivers Greenway I Kaldi’s Coffee THE MUNY GROUNDS AT FOREST PARK Katy Land Trust I Metro Arts in Transit I Metro Lighting I Microgrid Energy Missouri Department of Natural Resources I MRC Recycling I The Muny I Pedro’s Planet Purina I Saint Louis University - Center for Sustainability I St. Louis Cardinals 4 A Greener Game Thrivent Financial I Trailnet I Upper Limits Rock Gym I USAgain Designed by Cfx I cfx-inc.com I Printed by The Advertisers Printing Co. - SPG Certified CONTENTS EARTH DAY CHALLENGE Earth Day Challenge...................................................................................................................... 2 The Earth Day Challenge is designed to encourage Festival attendees to incorporate low-impact About St. Louis Earth Day ...........................................................................................................3-4 behaviors into their everyday lives, making the Earth a cleaner, healthier place to live. Complete Commitment to Sustainability ...................................................................................................5-6 at
    [Show full text]
  • Etd-10022017-095833.Pdf (15.33 Mb )
    Template B v3.0 (beta): Created by J. Nail 06/2015 Assessing visual preference among fourth grade students for habitat components on educational green roofs in Starkville, Mississippi By TITLE PAGE Amy Counterman A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Mississippi State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Landscape Architecture in Landscape Architecture in the Department of Landscape Architecture Mississippi State, Mississippi December 2017 Copyright by COPYRIGHT PAGE Amy Counterman 2017 Assessing visual preference among fourth grade students for habitat components on educational green roofs in Starkville, Mississippi By APPROVAL PAGE Amy Counterman Approved: ____________________________________ Robert F. Brzuszek (Committee Chair) ____________________________________ Timothy J. Schauwecker (Committee Member) ____________________________________ Peter R. Summerlin (Committee Member) ____________________________________ Michael Seymour (Graduate Coordinator) ____________________________________ George M. Hopper Dean College of Agriculture and Life Science Name: Amy Counterman ABSTRACT Date of Degree: December 8, 2017 Institution: Mississippi State University Major Field: Landscape Architecture Major Professor: Robert Brzuszek Title of Study: Assessing visual preference among fourth grade students for habitat components on educational green roofs in Starkville, Mississippi Pages in Study 148 Candidate for Degree of Master of Landscape Architecture As urbanization grows wildlife habitat is displaced
    [Show full text]
  • Summer 2015 Skagit Conservation District
    SKAGIT CONSERVATION DISTRICT News Volume 31, Number 2 SCDSOIL • WATER • WOODLAND Summer 2015 Skagit Conservation District O ering free technical, nancial, and educational resources for landowners PROGRAMS INCLUDE Livestock/Small Farm Planning Youth Education Forestry Planning Native Plant Sales INSIDE THIS ISSUE: Community Wildfire Preparedness Planning • Fire & Forestry ........................ 2-3 Conservation Easements • Lessons from the Field ............... 4 Engineering Services • Samish News .......................... 5-8 Adult Education/Volunteer Programs • Kids for Conservation ................. 9 • On the Farm .............................10 www.skagitcd.org • Backyard Conservation .............11 • Community Stewardship ......12-14 • SCD Sta and Board News .........15 FIRE & FORESTRY STRESSED OUT FORESTS Humans know all too well what it means to be stressed out. o Diseased and insect infested trees are much more prone Things like work, relationship problems, tra c, and money to wild re ignition and spread. immediately come to mind. But did you know that forests can o Healthy trees that normally store carbon and o set fossil be stressed, too? Wait a second! Forests don’t have feelings! True, fuel emissions cannot properly store carbon if they are (although there are some that might disagree) but they can still stressed. Also, the carbon that is “banked” in our forests get stressed in a physical way. Healthy forests provide a plethora gets released to the atmosphere during a wild re when of bene ts to the functioning of our planet and the species that the trees are burning. exist on it. As humans, our existence is tied to our forests whether o Intense wild res can destroy the important organic we realize it or not.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Make and Manage a Bee Hotel: Instructions That Really Work by Marc Carlton, Updated November 2017
    How to Make and Manage a Bee Hotel: Instructions that Really Work By Marc Carlton, updated November 2017 What are Solitary Bees ? As well as Bumblebees and Honey bees (that live socially) there are over 240 species of wild bees in the UK that are called 'solitary bees' because they make individual nest cells for their larvae. Most species nest in small tunnels or holes in the ground or in sandy banks, piles of sand, or crumbling mortar or sparse starved lawns. You can leave areas of bare soil or gravel in your garden for these. Others use the hollow stems of dead plants such as brambles, or tunnels previously bored into dead wood by beetles. A number of species of small solitary wasps share a similar lifestyle. Harmless to us, they are predators of small insects. Some of the more distinctive ones that are common in gardens are described in my fact sheet about solitary bees and gardens. Although they are known as solitary bees, some species will group their nest cells together in aggregations, and a few have evolved social behaviour rather like bumblebees. Many solitary bees are very small and you may not have realised they are bees. All collect nectar and pollen from flowers, except the so-called 'cuckoo' species that lay their eggs in the nest cells of other species. Solitary bees are harmless and not aggressive. They rarely if ever sting unless trodden on or squashed between your fingers. They do not have painful stings like honeybees. In most cases if they attempt to sting, you will not even feel it.
    [Show full text]
  • Building an Insect Hotel Habitat
    Building an Insect Hotel Habitat Why Build One? Our gardens are home to a wide range of living creatures. An average garden could hold over 2,000 different species of insect! With all this diversity of life it is good to know that very few creatures cause significant damage to our prized flowers, fruit and vegetables, the ones that gardeners call pests. Even better, there are many more creatures that help us control the pests. By providing the right habitats we can greatly increase the number of beneficial insects in the garden. Some wild invertebrates, such as bumblebees and solitary bees, are declining in numbers in the wider countryside, so by providing homes we can contribute to their conservation. The Insect Hotel on display is built entirely from recycled materials. The main structure is discarded pallets, and much of the additional wood is the product of routine woodland management operations. This sheet tells you how to build a similar habitat, but if this is too ambitious, there are plenty of ideas which can be used on a smaller scale in any garden. Where to site your habitat Many invertebrates like cool damp conditions, so you can site your habitat in semi shade, by a hedge or under a tree. Putting the habitat close to other wildlife features, such as an overgrown hedge, a shrubbery or a pond will make it easier for small creatures to find it. Not all creatures like to be in the shade: solitary bees like a warm sunny spot, so put tubes for bees on the sunniest side of the habitat, or put them elsewhere in the garden.
    [Show full text]
  • Grimes County Master Gardeners
    Texas Master Gardeners August 2019 Volume 11, Issue VIII Grimes County Master Gardeners Garden Tips for August Well, here it is….hot, dry summer. Its maintenance time to keep all those plants thriv- Inside this issue: ing and adequately watered. Here are a few August gardening tips: • Heirloom and hybrid roses have stopped blooming in the hottest time of the sum- Growing Succulents 2 mer but now is the time to prune back about 25% to generate new growth for blooms in the fall. Types of Succulents 3 • If your water source contains large amounts of salts then now is a good time to dissolve and flush out your containers and plant beds by watering twice as long Building an Insect Hotel 4 and deep. In dry conditions, salts will accumulate in the soil and cause poor per- formance. Events Calendar 5 • If you keep a garden journal, now is a good time to walk around your garden and check to see which flowers are blooming. Only the toughest can keep going this Grimes County Master 6 Gardeners time of year. • Take a look at the graph below to find which vegetables can be planted in our area now for a fall garden. Remember, most tomatoes take about 90 days to set fruit. Cacti are Ninety days from August 1st is November 1st. The likelihood of frost in early No- succulents but vember is slim but it has happened in the past. not all succulents are cacti Pa ge 2 Grimes County Master Gardeners Volume 11, Issue VIII Growing Succulents Are you a beginner gardener or just looking for something easy to grow? Then look no further than the succulent.
    [Show full text]
  • White Palace
    Model: WHITE PALACE Guests of the hotel rooms BUTTERFLIES (e.g. Admiral, Peacock, Hawk moth) These two rooms are filled with butterflies in bad weather and in winter. Different butterfly species, such as the 1 Brimstone, the Peacock or the Painted Lady like to hide in hollow spaces such as these and are looking specifically to rest and shelter here. SOLITARY BEES (e.g. Wood Bees, Mason Bees, Plasterer Bees) 2 The hollow reed branches provide optimal breeding grounds for a variety of bee and wasp species. In the tubes the insects‘ eggs are stored and then “bricked up” by the mother through secretion. After the stadium of pupated grubs several months, in spring-time/summer the young bees enclose and begin their new live in freedom in your garden. ANTS & BEETLES (e.g. useful Forest Ants, Wood Beetles, Ground Beetles) Different ants and beetles prefer loosely inserted wood shavings as nesting aid. They also feel at home here, to crea- 3 te a neighbourhood in the winter. Ants loosen the top layers of soil and also feed on, for example, spiders. Ground beetles secretly feed at night on snails, grubs, caterpillars and potato beetles. BEETLES & FLIES (e.g. Ladybirds, Ground beetles, Lacewings) 4 Lacewings eat a wide variety of lice species and use the room all year round as a shelter. Guests, such as ladybirds, feed on spider mites and aphid and use the room, especially at night and in the winter. So you can benefit from natural pest control. WASPS (e.g. peaceful Gold Wasps, Grab Wasps, Loam Wasps) These “suites” are preferably booked by harmless wasps and bees.
    [Show full text]
  • Krischik, Vera A. and E. Tenczar. 2014. Pollinator Conservation
    Page 1 of 10 Center for Urban Pollinator Conservation Ecology and Sustainability Vera Krischik and Emily Tenczar, University of Minnesota, August 2014 www.entomology.umn.edu/cues Bees pollinate Bees are Important Pollinators native plants so seeds can be produced. Bees pollinate many crops. FROM: Native bees are threatened by Bees and other pollinators provide pollination services for 70 percent of all flowering habitat loss, plants, which result in seeds and fruits. Beyond agriculture, pollinators are keystone lack of nectar species in most terrestrial ecosystems. Fruits and seeds derived from insect pollination are a major part of the diet of birds, and of mammals ranging from red-backed voles to and pollen grizzly bears. However, many of our native bee pollinators are at risk, and the status of plants, and many more is unknown. Habitat loss, habitat alteration, and fragmentation, pesticide use, insecticides. and introduced diseases all contribute to the declines of bees. Bees can be divided into two groups by their lifestyles, either solitary or social. Only a few Honey bees are species of bees are social. Social bees share a nest, and divide the work of building the threatedend by nest, caring for the offspring, and foraging for pollen and nectar. The principal social bees Varroa mites, are the honey bee, which is not native to the U.S. and about forty-five US species of management native bumble bees. practices, lack The life cycle of a typical bumble bee colony. Illustration by David Wysotski, Allure Illustration. of nectar and pollen plants, 1. A queen emerges from and hibernation in spring and finds a nest site, such as a mouse insecticides.
    [Show full text]
  • Investigate Aphids: Teachers Handbook
    Stage 3 Science and Technology Competition Teacher’s Handbook and Learning Sequence NSW Department of Primary Industries Schools Program [email protected] www.dpi.nsw.gov.au Lead Author: Jess Fedorow (Project Officer Education, NSW DPI Orange). Editors, Advisors and Co-authors: Michelle Fifield (Education Officer Schools, NSW DPI Orange) and Jo Hathway (Project Officer Education, NSW DPI Tocal). Technical Advisors: Ainsley Seago (Technical Manager Insect Collection, NSW DPI) and Rachel Taylor-Hukins (NSW Grains Biosecurity Officer, NSW DPI). Design: Nicky Parker (Wild Poppy Design) and Jessica Green (Digital Media and Design Officer, NSW DPI). Illustrator: Ainsley Seago. Acknowledgements The Investigate competition and this resource are an initiative of the NSW Department of Primary Industries Schools Program and have been developed in consultation with the NSW Department of Education. We would like to acknowledge and sincerely thank Tanya Coli (NSW Department of Education) for her insight and assistance in the development of the Investigate: aphids competition and documentation. NSW Department of Primary Industries staff are acknowledged for their contribution to this document. Disclaimer The information in this document is based on knowledge and understanding at the time of writing (November 2016). Copyright © State of NSW through the Department of Industry, Skills and Regional Development 2016, except where indicated otherwise. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons-Attribution- Non Commercial- Share Alike 4.0 International license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ Under this license the material is available for free use and adaption. Educators may use, adapt, communicate and re- publish material from the resource.
    [Show full text]
  • Insect Hotel
    114.815 Insect hotel Necessary tools: Please Note Wood glue The OPITEC range of projects is not intended as play toys for young Hammer, penci,ruler children.They are teaching aids for young people learning the skills Drills 4mm,8mm diameter ( Filling, hanger) of Craft, Design and Technology.These projects should only be un- dertaken and tested with the guidance of a fully qualified adult. Hot glue gun ( Filling) The finished projects are not suitable to give to children under 3 years old. Some parts can be swallowed. Danger of suffocation! PARTS LIST Base plate 5 114x112x13 Base 1 Sides 10 178x80x12 Sides 2 Base 5 80x60x12 Base 3 Roof 5 130x95x12 Dach 4 Rear wall 5 190x83x3,5 Rear 5 Mesh 2 140x80 Abdeckgitter 6 Front plate 1 140x58x12 Front 7 Nails,fixings Fixings 8 diverse filling material Filling 9 General: This pack contains material for 5 insect houses.You can make two houses with fixed filling, two with loose filling ( mesh) and a butterfly house In conjunction with: Note. Glue all the parts together first and then fix with nails! In diesem Bausatz ist das Material für 5 Insektenhäuser enthalten. Es können zwei Häuser mit fester (eingeklebter) Füllung, zwei Häuser mit Loser Füllung (Schutzgitter) sowie ein Schmetterlingshaus hergestellt werden. Hinweis: Alle Teile erst verleimen und dann mit Nägeln fixieren! D114815#2 1 INSTRUCTIONS 1 8a 2 8a 1 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 8a 2 2 2 2 3 1 3 8a 4 4 4 45 4 20 3 ø8 5 4 2 2 2 5 2 2 5 2 1 8b 1 1 1 5 Glue in reed 6 Glue in the cane pine cones or fix with a 4 4 mesh 6 Insert bark 6 Drill ø4 pieces, add 8c 2 2 and ø8mm the mesh to 6 holes in the stop them wood falling out 1 1 9 7 4 4 8a 2 2 7 8a Fill with thin twigs 7 1 7 2 D114815#1 1 BAUANLEITUNG 2 4 3 1 5 1 Beetle & Flies (z.B.
    [Show full text]
  • July-August 2014
    What’s Growing On? The Fletcher Wildlife Garden Newsletter www.ofnc.ca/fletcherWWW.OFNC.CA/ July - August 2014 FLETCHER.PHP Summer Days It's been a long time coming, but summer has finally taken hold. The Fletcher Wildlife Garden is awash with blooms, birds, and insects. Our three regular volunteer crews — as well as a number of volunteers who work on their own — are taking advantage of the warm days to continue their hard work maintaining the garden. But help is always needed, so come along and join us – your help counts. In this issue, we learn about the Emerald Ash Borer, a destructive little beetle that was the cause of the massive cut down of our beloved Ash Woods. We also take a look back at our successful annual plant sale, an award given to the FWG by the City of Ottawa, an in-depth look at the goings on in the Backyard Garden, a new scientific project, and the frustration of trying to get the FWG's main road named and mapped. And we have our returning favorites: Nature Notes and Things I Learned on Facebook. Don’t forget to check our photo galleries frequently – www.pbase.com/fwg. Christine has been posting fascinating photos of insects: a tiny mayfly with huge eyes, red wasp cocoons, oak In recent years, House Wrens have become a regular nesting bird at the Fletcher Wildlife Garden, usually aphids, a giant swallowtail butterfly, a white-marked tussock fledging two broods a year. caterpillar, and more. Most are colourful and beautiful and the photos are works of art.
    [Show full text]