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Gardening for pollinators. Attracting bees, butterflies, and birds to your garden. B ees. Decline in health, populations Colony collapse disorder, tracheal mites, foul brood, pesticide use, commercial beekeeping
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Gardening for pollinators Attracting bees, butterflies, and birds to your garden
Bees • Decline in health, populations • Colony collapse disorder, tracheal mites, foul brood, pesticide use, commercial beekeeping • Honeybees provide over $3 billion in pollination services annually in the US alone
Fear of bees is irrational if you aren’t allergic • Bees typically will not sting humans unless provoked • Bees die after single stinging incident • Swarming bees are most docile • They have no brood or honey to protect
Bees forage throughout the growing season • Early spring to late fall as weather and nectar availability permit • To attract bees, plant a variety of forage plants that flower at different times of the year • Ease the burden of long MN winter with early- and late-flowering plant species
EARLY-flowering plants • Overwintering garden plants, early weeds (ex: dandelions), crocus, hyacinth, borage, calendula, lilac, alfalfa, red clover, buckwheat, apples, cherries, chokeberries, Juneberries, pussy willow, currant, alder, bleeding heart, hawthorn, mountain ash
MIDSEASON-flowering plants • Bee balm, cosmos, echinacea, snapdragons, foxglove, hosta, globe thistle, lavender, Liatris, skullcap, mullein, verbena, Baptisia, buckeye, linden/basswood, raspberry, French marigold, fuschia, many annuals
LATE-flowering plants • Zinnias, sedum, asters, witch hazel, goldenrod, chrysanthemum, snapdragon, chelone (AKA obedient plant), Joe pye weed, perennial sunflower, helenium
Native bee food plants • From the University of MN:
Qualities to look for in bee forage plants: • Your bee garden should be at least 1 meter in diameter or bees may ignore it * Single-flowering varieties • Doubles are pretty but they produce less nectar • Open-pollinated (non-hybrids) • Bees also need pollen for protein and hybrids are usually sterile so they produce little or no pollen No!
Other bee-friendly actions: • Don’t use broad-spectrum or synthetic pesticides in your garden (or anywhere!) • Provide bare ground for ground-nesting bees • Let brambles or hedgerows grow wild and weedy • Make a wooden nest box for mason bees
How to provide habitat for Minnesota’s native bees: • Practice no-till gardening • Leave logs, snags, stumps, and clumps of grass for bees to nest in • Plant hedgerows with dogwood, pussy willow, sand cherry, brambles, or other flowering plants • Don’t spray chemicals in bee habitats
Gardening to attract native bees: • Use native plants • Choose several colors of flowers • blue, purple, violet, white, & yellow • Plant flowers in clumps • Include flowers of different shapes • Bees come in all sizes and have differing tongue lengths
Mason bees • Solitary • Only live in existing holes (don’t make new ones) • Very gentle, rarely sting
Mining bees • Solitary • Not aggressive, rarely sting • Habitat: exposed, well-drained soil
Gardening to attract butterflies • Butterflies are also pollinators (so are flies, beetles, male mosquitos…) • Group similar-colored flowers together • More attractive to butterflies • Avoid double flowers • Choose plants with varying bloom times • Annuals: constant blooming • Critical time: mid- to late summer • Choose plants that produce multiple florets with high nectar content
Butterfly gardening • For specific butterflies, research host plant of caterpillars • Monarch: milkweed • Swallowtail: fennel, dill • Bog fritillary: willow, violets, smartweed • Silvery checkerspot: black-eyed Susan, sunflower * Keep in mind that caterpillars may do some damage to your plants • Usually not serious or enough to kill the plant
Butterfly & caterpillar food • Butterflies usually feed on something other than what caterpillars feed on • Some butterflies lack mouthparts, never eat • Some butterflies eat rotting fruit, dung, mud, carrion, or nectar
For the butterflies that eat nectar: • General butterfly-attracting plants: • Lilac, coneflower, butterfly weed, milkweed, butterfly bush, asters, most plants in the mint family (sage, oregano, rosemary, lavender, lemon balm, basil, thyme…) • (extensive lists in handouts)
Other considerations • Provide wet sand or mud for butterflies • Males need these mineral salts to complete life cycle • Called “puddling”
Other considerations • Provide a hedgerow of butterfly-attracting plants • Butterfly wings are delicate, easily tattered • Hedgerow protects them from damaging winds
Other considerations • DON’T SPRAY PESTICIDES! • If you must use them, choose organic & target specific • Don’t use on or near butterfly garden/habitat (esp. Bt for caterpillar pests)
Speaking of caterpillar pests: • Watch out for these destructors in your landscape • Gypsy moth • Tent caterpillar • Cutworm • Army worm • Imported cabbage looper
Cheap & easy butterfly attractors • Sugar water in a tray or wicked jar • Tray of rotting fruit
Why create a bird garden? • Birds are losing habitat to human activities • A third of North America’s native birds are experiencing population decline • Birds help us • Pollinate some flowers • Eat pest insects • Add to natural beauty of our landscapes
Attracting birds • Plants that attract birds: • Aster, bachelor buttons, black-eyed Susan, chrysanthemum, columbine, marigold, sunflowers, cedar, cherry, crabapple, dogwood, hawthorn, plum, Juneberry, sumac, blackberry, boxwood, elderberry, grape, holly, honeysuckle, myrtle, raspberry, witch hazel, yew, viburnum….
Other things that attract birds • Bird feeders • Nesting sites • birdhouses • Brush piles & dead trees • Good habitat/shelter • Water features • Birdbaths, ponds
Birds can also be pests • Eat berries & other crops • Nest where you don’t want them • Poop • attack
solutions • Share your bounty & tolerate minor losses • Dedicate a less-used part of your yard to bird/wildlife habitat • Bird-proof the things you don’t want to share • Ex: bird netting for berries • Don’t jump to conclusions • Birds in garden may be eating pests
Learn more about native pollinators: • Xerces Society Pollinator Conservation Planning Short Course • June 13, 2012 • 9am-4pm in Duluth • $45 • Register online at www.xerces.org • www.xerces.org is an EXCELLENT resource for more info on pollinators
Problem-solving with plants Wet soil, dry soil, shade, and deer issues
Problem #1:Wet soil/standing water • Solution: plant a rain garden • Shallow depression filled with flood-tolerant shrubs, flowers, and grasses that collect & filter storm runoff • Attracts birds & butterflies • Reduces mosquito habitat
Problem #1: wet soil/standing water • Plants to use (list provided in handout): • Obedient plant, prairie dropseed, daylily, Joe pye weed, boneset, willow, tamarack, river birch, caterpillar grass, cardinal flower, swamp milkweed, switchgrass, lupine, Veronica, Liatris… • Bigger plants take up more water
Rain Garden Placement • Easiest to create in low point in yard • Where water naturally flows already • Next to hard, impermeable surfaces or where more water flows • Alley, sidewalk, driveway, flow from gutters • Keep it @ least 10 ft from buildings • Avoid damage to foundation • Best to start with design before you start digging
Problem #2: sandy/dry soil • Very common in this area • Plant in depressions and mulch to preserve water • Set transplants slightly lower than soil surface • For small spaces, you can add organic material • Increase water-holding capacity of soil • Mix 50/50 with existing soil when transplanting • Might only be temporary
Problem #2: sandy/dry soil • Select drought-tolerant, native plants • Ex: Juneberry, chokeberry, bearberry, butterfly bush, smoketree, creeping juniper, spicebush, honeysuckle, bush cherry, sumac, currant, Rugosa rose, lilac, viburnum, Artemisia, Penstemon, Echinacea, sage, yarrow, tickseed, lamb’s ear
Problem #3: shade • Many tall trees in the area • Selective culling or pruning can help • Or choose shade-tolerant plants
Problem #3: shade • Shade-tolerant plants: • Honeysuckle, lady’s mantle, valerian, lenten rose, goldenseal, wild ginger, blue cohosh, black cohosh, hostas, ferns, trillium, bleeding heart, alder, beech, redbud, witch hazel, ironwood, hemlock
Problem #3: shade • Shade-tolerant edibles: • ostrich fern, serviceberry, wintergreen, lettuce, spinach, Swiss chard, cabbage, bokchoy, kohlrabi, chokecherry, highbush cranberry, chokeberry
Problem #4: deer • Exclusion is the best deterrent • Tall fence • 3D fence • Outward-angled fence
Problem #4: deer • Cheaper deterrents: • Dried blood around garden perimeter • Plantskydd • Repellex (for ornamentals only) • Capsaicin systemic—makes plants spicy! • Works on white cedar (a favorite food of deer)
Deer’s favorite foods • White cedar • Apples • Hostas • Clematis • Roses • Azalea • Hibiscus • Phlox • White pine • Mountain ash • Asiatic lilies • Burning bush • Endive • Lettuce • Bitter greens • Crabapple • Crocus • Pansy • Flowering almond • Hydrangea
Deer-resistant plants • Yarrow • Ageratum • Barberry • Lamb’s ear • Allium • Columbine • Wax begonia • Coneflower • Heliotrope • Sweet alyssum • Daffodil • Peony • Poppy • Geranium • Russian sage • Marigold • Bittersweet • Forsythia • Scots pine • lilac
Selecting deer resistant plants • IN GENERAL, they are: • Furry • Thorny (exception: roses) • Not green • Toxic
Proper planting techniques For trees, shrubs, and perennials
Trees & shrubs • Materials: • Shovel • Compost or manure • Mulch (optional) • Tree protector (optional)
Trees & shrubs • Method: • Dig a hole as deep as pot and twice as wide • Mix extant soil with compost 50/50 • Place plant in hole • Separate/spread pot-bound roots • Backfill with 50/50 mix • Mound soil around plant • Make a small “moat” around plant to hold water • Cover with mulch
Perennials & annuals • Materials: • Shovel • Compost/fertilizer (optional) • Mulch (optional)
Perennials & annuals • Methods: • Dig hole @ least as big as pot • Mix extant soil with compost or fertilizer (optional) • Place plant in hole • Separate/spread roots if rootbound • Mulch (optional)