Home of the Practically Perfect Pink Phlox and other native plants for pollinators
Showing posts with label Bumble Bee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bumble Bee. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

Wildflower Wednesday: June Blooms and Their Pollinator Visitors


  I appreciate all the pollinators at Clay and Limestone, but, my favorite has always been Bumbles.

We moved into this house in early fall 3 dozen years ago. The yard was a mess and there were no real garden beds, but the Summer Phlox and blue wood aster were still blooming. I was captivated by the Bumbles who were actively working the flowers as much as I was by the flowers. Those bumbles stole my heart. Over the years I noticed how hard they worked in the garden. They were the first pollinators up and about each morning and the last to leave each night. I found them sleeping on flowers on cool mornings and watched them nectaring and gathering pollen on the last of the latest blooming ex-asters in November. They were a joy to watch and I wanted to learn all about them. (from earlier post) 

Many years later and Bumbles still make me smile, but, so do a dozen other pollinators. To celebrate June Wildflower Wednesday and Pollinator Week here are more wildflowers and their pollinator visitors.

Phlox paniculata and a Carpenter bee

 


 Although, Bumbles are hard workers, they are not the only active garden visitors. When the Bumbles are slow to arrive Eastern Carpenter bees are out and about visiting some of the earlier flowers.  They are generalist foragers and are known to pollinate garden crops and garden plants. Who could not love these giant beauties. The menacing/dive bombing carpenter bee you encounter is only protecting a nest. It's a male drone and he's all buzz and no sting! In the photo above you can see them "nectar robbing" Phlox.

The first Phloxes in this garden were here when I arrived. They were the offspring of whatever the previous gardeners might have planted 30+ years ago and were all wonderful magenta flowered beauties. They are still here, well, the offspring of the offspring are still here and after years of letting species and cultivars go to seed, real treasures have been produced in the crossings of the crossings.

 Butterflies, moths (including Hummingbird and Sphinx moths) and skippers are the primary pollinators of phlox. Their proboscis are long enough to reach the nectar at the base of the narrow phlox corolla and pollen is carried to the next flower. In fact, Phlox has all the characteristics of a classic butterfly nectar flower.

  • clustered flowers with a landing platform
  • brightly colored
  • open during the day
  • ample nectar producer 
  • nectar deeply hidden in corolla

 Silvery Checkerspot on Gloriosa Daisy. 



 

The Gloriosas have most of the characteristics of their Rudbeckia hirta parent, except the flowers are three times as large and their colors are mixtures of pure yellow or bicolored, many with dark mahogany red splotches at the base of the petals. Yes, I do love the many colorful varieties and  the big flowers, but I also love that they're all rough and tumble flowers that can take the heat and humidity of our Middle South summers and continue to bloom until frost (deadhead them).  Gloriosa Daisies do very well.  

Butterflies, bees of all sizes, wasps, beetles and even little loper caterpillars rely on the many Susans for food, and shelter.  Plant them in your garden and sit back and watch the pollinators. I've already seen small Carpenter Bees, Green Metallic bees, Bumbles and skippers visiting the flowers to feed and/or gather pollen.  Above photo: Silvery checkerspots which can be seen in meadows and forest openings.

  Partridge Pea  and Bumbles


First, cool thing: Those cool flowers, that the bumbles make a mad dash for every morning, have no nectar, only pollen. The bees are attracted to the food pollen on the purple anthers, and get dusted with the reproductive pollen from the yellow anthers. Nature is amazing and plant reproduction is so cool. Second, cool thing: Partridge Peas are not nectarless. Nectar is produced at the base of the leaf in tiny, reddish-orange glands called nectares. Ants visit them regularly. Third cool thing: These are annuals and they will always be in your garden because they seed about so beautifully. Fourth cool thing: They're the larval host for  Cloudless giant sulphur, Orange sulphur, Sleepy orange butterflies. See photo of Sulphur on Coneflower later in post.

 Mountain Mint and a fly


 The flowers of Pycnanthemum muticum might be small, but they are mighty!

The researchers at Penn State's The Pollinator Trial  found that Clustered Mountain Mint was the best plant for flowering longevity; for pollinator visitor diversity; for sheer number of insect visitors (78); and, for sheer number of bee and syrphid visitors. 

...and yes, it's a mint so be prepared for it to move across your garden!

 

Ruellia strepens and a butterfly

 


Much to my sorrow, I have never, ever seen pollinators on a blooming flower, but, I've read that long tongued bees, miner bees, carpenter bees and parasitic bees are its primary pollinators. Apparently, fertilization has been very successful in my garden, because the progeny is all over. Maybe, the pollinators are sneaking visits when I am inside. But, it's more likely as Researchers at a college in Missouri, discovered: flowers of R strepens open during the early morning dark hours, allowing pollination by moth species. That's good to know. According to another source the lavender-blue trumpets attract hummingbirds and butterflies, too. Here's a link to a site with a bee foraging on the flower! Let me tell you, I was thrilled to find it!

 

Asclepias speciosa bumble and Eastern Tiger swallowtail


  "Common milkweed is Nature's mega food market for insects. Over 450 insects are known to feed on some portion of the plant. Numerous insects are attracted to the nectar-laden flowers and it is not at all uncommon to see flies, beetles, ants, bees, wasps, and butterflies on the flowers at the same time. Occasionally hummingbirds will try, unsuccessfully, to extract nectar. Its sap, leaves and flowers also provide food. In the northeast and midwest, it is among the most important food plants for monarch caterpillars (Danaus plexippus). Other common feeders are the colorful (red with black dots) red milkweed beetle (Tetraopes tetraophthalmus), the milkweed tussock caterpillar (Euchaetes egle) and the large (Oncopeltus fasciatus) and the small (Lygaeus kalmia) red and black milkweed bugs. The latter two are particularly destructive as both the adults and nymphs are seed predators. They can destroy 80 to 90 percent of a colony's seed crop. The red (or orange-red) and black coloration of most of these insects is known as aposematic coloration; that is, the colors advertise the fact that the organism is not good to eat." Source

...and yes, this is an aggressive plant, so plant it where it can move around all it wants/can.

 

Spiderwort  and a bumble


 

I love my garden in the early morning. Once the sun has made it past the trees, it begins to spot light the shadier garden nooks. Tradescantia look their best in that cool morning sun. The sun light makes those feathery violet hairs glow. Later in the day they're washed out by the hot, bright light, but that is the case for many delicate flowers. Spiderworts are pollinated by bumbles and that makes me really happy. Beautiful and unique flowers that are not terribly temperamental about soil. They come in a kaleidoscopic palette of sumptuous colors. If tamed with a cutting back the plants can bush out and possibly rebloom.

...and yes, some can be aggressive. I don't care, I adore them.


 Hydrangea arborescens and a bumble


 I love watching the Bumbles work a Hydrangea arborescens flower. They move so fast it's nearly impossible to get a good photo.  Hydrangea arborescens, commonly known as smooth hydrangea or wild hydrangea, is a gangly limbed deciduous shrub with large, opposite, toothed leaves and grayish stems. The dome shaped flower head is composed of sterile and fertile flowers that begin to bloom in June in my garden. It's native to woodland slopes, hillsides and stream banks in the Eastern US. I adore it.

Most of you know I garden for wildlife, so the wildlife value of plants I bring into the garden are important. Wild hydrangeas have pretty good wildlife value: they're pollinated by many species of native bees and beetles and it's a host plant for two moths, Darapsa versicolor/Hydrangea Sphinx Moth and Olethreutes ferriferana/Hydrangea leaf-tier moth. I love that little carpenter bees (Ceratina spp.), Halictid bees, masked bees (Hylaeus spp.), miscellaneous wasps, mosquitoes, Syrphid flies, thick-headed flies, Muscid flies, dance flies (Empis spp.), tumbling flower beetles, and long-horned beetles (source) visit the flowers, but, watching a bumble bee race back and forth is fabulous.

Echinacea purpurea: Imperfection doesn't stop a pollinator

Not one of these critters is bothered by the imperfect chewed on petals.
The Cloudless Sulphur butterfly still sips nectar and bumbles collect pollen even on damaged flowers.

We've been convinced by advertising that a garden should be perfect and that insects are harmful and must be eliminated or they will damage our flowering plants and make them ugly. I encourage everyone to reconsider beauty and to begin to appreciate the insect damaged plant as providing food for a critter that may in turn be food for a spider, another insect or a song bird. 

 A friend told me she use to pull the caterpillars off her fennel before she knew they were Swallowtail butterfly cats. I told her what they were! New gardeners need to make sure ugly bugs aren't beneficial insects before you pluck them off or squish them. Some of the "good bugs" include lacewings, lady beetles, minute pirate bug, soldier bugs, assassin bugs, braconid wasps, tachinid flies, flower flies and aphid mites. Their larva aren't always attractive!

So embrace imperfection in your garden!


  • You can help create a paradigm shift that redefines garden beauty to include imperfection.
  • You can refuse to be shamed or swayed by the judgement of perfection worshipers.
  • You can say no to pesticides that poison flowers and kill our important garden visitors.
  • You can let nursery managers know that you don't need or expect them to offer "perfect plants" that have pre-treated with insecticides (often neonicotinoids).
  • You just have to do it!

 Your garden will not be magazine perfect, but, pollinators don't care if your flower petals are chewed on.  They need flowers bursting with pollen and nectar. Your garden will be teeming with life. Spiders will build webs; the beneficial insects will keep aphids in check; pollinators will pollinate; and, birds will hunt the insects.

It will be a beautiful imperfect garden, just as it's supposed to be.

When you let go of pesticides and embrace imperfection you become the change our world needs.

 

I am so glad you stopped by. xoxogail

 

 

Want pollinators?~~Here's what we can do:

  • Plant many different flowers that bloom over the entire growing season to encourage different native bees to move into your garden.
  • Plant flowers in drifts....It increases pollinator efficiency and looks prettier!
  • Plant the pollinator power house wildflowers for your neck of the woods.
  • Plant night blooming and fragrant flowers.
  • Make peace with weedy lawn natives.
  • Let our gardens be a little messy, so that there are nesting places and shelter.
  • If you want to encourage a diversity of pollinators~~ you will need to provide open areas (e.g. bare earth, large stones) where butterflies, may bask, and moist soil from which they may get needed minerals. 
  • Accept that not all pollinators are pretty and not all are well behaved; Wasps! Beneficial insect larva.
  • Accept that when we invite pollinators into the garden, plants will get eaten and look ratty for awhile.
  • Remember birds and bats! Leave the insects alone.
  • Provide a water source with easy access for pollinators.
  • Plant oaks and other trees that support a lot of pollinators.
  • NEVER, EVER, EVER, EVER, EVER USE PESTICIDES. I MEAN NEVER!
Welcome to Wildflower Wednesday. It's the fourth Wednesday of each month and time to celebrate wildflowers from all over this great big, beautiful world. I am always glad when you stop by and I so appreciate when you make a comment.

 

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.


Monday, October 5, 2015

Goldenrods

Possibly Fall's best landing pads of deliciousness

Bumbles
Skippers

 Locust Borer (Megacyllene robiniae)
Green Sweat Bee
More Bumbles
Honeybee from neighbor's hive
They might all want to watch out for this Ambush bug (subfamily Phymatinae), which waits to prey on all of the Goldenrod visitors!

Goldenrods provide a big flower show each year and any insect that needs pollen and nectar is sure to be found visiting.Today after a week of rain I stood in the garden and could see hundreds of insects stopping by their golden blooms! You can't ask for a better wildlife valuable plant when it comes to fall wildflowers and when you combine them with the ex-asters, you get beauty and happy pollinators.

xoxogil

 PS If you want to provide for fall pollinators you must plant landing pads of deliciousness like Goldenrods and other wildflowers and you must never, ever, ever, ever, use pesticides in your garden. I mean never!


Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Every where you turn people are talking about pollinators

....and that's a good thing.

The news we share is often not good. Native bees, monarch butterflies and a host of other pollinators are still in peril and sharing that information with as many people as we can is important. Knowledge is essential for action and change to happen.
 

Habitat fragmentation and loss, the use of neoniconoids and other pesticides and herbicides (by the agriculture/horticulture industry and home owners) and the introduction of non-native species are known causes of both wide-scale losses in biological diversity and pollinator declines.


But, we must not give into despair or throw in the trowel...We can help pollinators.



It's really quite easy, we must plant more flowers.
Lots and lots of flowers that bees and other pollinators prefer.
Flowers that are rich in pollen.
Flowers that are rich in nectar.
Colorful flowers that appeal to bees and hummingbirds.
Flowers that have a range of shapes and sizes to attract  butterflies,  bees, hummingbirds and even flies!
Flowers that bloom until frost for any late visitors.


Early blooming flowers that are pollinated by gnats and flies or the occasional honeybee out and about on warm days.

Flowers, trees and shrubs that are hosts for the larva of caterpillars and beneficial bugs.

Flowers that are native to our part of the gardening world.
 


Annuals and herbs are also attractive to pollinators and beneficial insects.


There's one other thing that we can do to help pollinators!


Learn to accept that there is beauty in imperfection and step away from the bug spray!

We can pledge to never, ever, ever use pesticides in our gardens.   


A corollary to not using pesticides in our gardens is to make sure that any plants we bring into our gardens have not been pre-treated with neurotoxic pesticides known as neonicotinoids.  They're systemic pesticides that have been found in the pollen and nectar of commonly sold bee-friendly plants.  Scientists now suspect that even small doses, like those that might be in a plant's pollen and nectar, can act to confuse the bees, making it hard to collect food and/or find their way to their hives. (go here for full Pesticide Research Institute study)

So what's a gardener to do! 




We can ask our independent garden centers to stock plants that are not pre-treated with systemic insecticides or to identify the ones that have been treated. 

We can look for locally grown organic plants.

We can grow our own. 

We can share and trade plants with other gardeners. 

We can become proactive and seek change~ Get the word out and work toward change of state and federal guidelines. 

We can change our perception of beauty to include the damaged petals and leaves of plants not treated with systemics.



It might not be easy, but, they're so worth the effort. 



Happy planting.
xoxogail

In case you want to read earlier pollinator posts~

Now Is The Time To Bee-gin Thinking About Bees (
here)
This Is The Place To Bee ( here)
If You Could Plant Only One Plant In Your Garden~Don't (here)
Must Bee The Season of The Witch (here)
Go Bare In Your Garden (here)
We can't All Be Pretty Pollinators (here)
Eye, Eye Skipper, Big Eyed Pollinators (here)
What's In Your Garden (here)
Royalty In The Garden~Monarch Butterfly (here)
Carpenter Bees (here)

Got Wildflowers?(here)
It's Spring and A Gardener's Thoughts Are On Pollinators (here)
The Wildflower and The Bee (here)
A Few Good Reasons To Plant Milkweek (here)
Got Shade? You Can Have Pollinators ( (here)
A Pollinator friendly Shrub (here)
Big Goings On at C and L (here

Where Have All My Pollinators Gone (here)

Other bee posts you might want to read~


Count Yourself Lucky To Have Hoverflies (
here)
Bumblebee Hotel (here)
Still Taking Care Of Bzzness (here)
My Sweet Embraceable You (here)


Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Bottoms Up: An Almost Wordless Wednesday

Ahh... Bumbles!

The Bumbles are out and about...They took forever to show themselves in the garden and bottoms up is what we'll see from now on!  

I am one happy gardener.

xoxogail

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Dangerous Times In A Garden

For any pollinator that stops by for a late summer or early fall nosh of pollen or nectar.
 Crab spiders are busy hunting all season, but they are especially noticeable on the nectar and pollen rich fall flowers.
look closely to see the critters
Clever little critter~that's exactly where all the pollinator action is from now until frost.
they resemble crabs with their oversized pairs of legs
Flowers spiders, as crab spiders are also known, have short, wide, flat bodies with two pairs of over sized crab like front legs for grabbing and holding their prey, and small venomous fangs for injecting a paralyzing poison. They are the stuff of nightmares for flies and bees, but, that fast acting venom means they can catch grasshoppers and butterflies...
the coloring matches the Rudbeckia cone

They are generally passive ambush hunters, waiting patiently for an unsuspecting bee or fly to land near their hiding spot. They are quick and like crabs can move backwards, forwards and sideways with ease. 
Crab spider hiding among Asclepias incarnata leaves
Masters of camouflage, they can change colors to match the flower they are hiding on.

No pollinator could distinguish this carefully constructed hiding place on Rudbeckia triloba from petals fluttering in the wind.

So, my darling bees and my precious butterflies you must be careful out there! 
Red-banded Hairstreak (Calycopsis cecrops)
There is no way to tell if there is a treat or a trap on any flower you land upon. There is danger lurking everywhere and even though I know it's all part of the circle of life, I wish you safe and happy nectaring.

xoxogail

Gail Eichelberger is a gardener and therapist in Middle Tennessee. She loves wildflowers and native plants and thoroughly enjoys writing about the ones she grows at Clay and Limestone. She reminds all that the words and images are the property of the author and cannot be used without written permission.