Pollinator Habitat for Bees, Butterflies and Other Pollinators | Ernst Conservation Seeds

Pollinator-Friendly Sites Planting Guide

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Pollinator meadows may be used to attract honeybees and more than 4,000 species of native pollinators in North America, including bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, and even some flies.

Increased attention to the plight of such pollinators as honeybees and monarch butterflies by the government and private sector has spurred an interest in developing pollinator-friendly habitats across the North American landscape. One of the highest examples was the 2015 White House announcement of the National Strategy to Promote the Health of Honeybees and Other Pollinators.

Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa virginica) enjoying the fall bloom of Solidago speciosa (Showy Goldenrod)

About Pollinator-Friendly Sites

Almost any site not intended to be mowed repeatedly during the growing season may be designed to be pollinator friendly. Pollinator-friendly meadows are often thought of as being planted on flat sites in full sun, but they can also be planted at woodland edges. Pollina­tor-friendly species aid in soil stabilization on steep slopes and riparian areas. Storm basins and wetlands are more aesthetically pleasing when enhanced with pollina­tor-friendly species. Rights-of-way under utility trans­mission lines, above pipelines, and along roadways can be developed to an ecologically beneficial state when functional diversity and pollinator-friendly species are incorporated into seed mix design. When planted within a solar array, transpiration from native plants can reduce panel temperatures thereby increasing panel efficiency.

The primary energy source for most adult bees, butter­flies, and other flower-loving pollinators is nectar. Pollen is essential for providing proteins and lipids to devel­oping bee larvae while leaf tissue from specific host plant families is required for butterfly caterpillars. Most native bees are nectar generalists in that, though pollen specialists, they can consume nectar from many plant families. Pollen that the larvae will consume requires a specific ratio of proteins to lipids. The best sources of pollen for native bees as well as leaf tissue for native butterflies are the native plant species with which they have co-evolved.

While not native to the U.S., honeybees have evolved to be able to use pollen from a wide range of species. Like native bees, honeybees feed nectar and pollen to their larvae. They also need pollen to have a particular pro­tein-to-lipid ratio that they get by collecting pollen from a variety of plant species.

Hummingbird Clearwig (Hemaris thysbe) visiting Monarda fistulosa (Wild Bergamot) at the Erie National Wildlife Reserve in Guys Mills, Pennsylvania.
Solar power generation sites can be sources for pollinator habitat.

Adult pollinators do not have the same dietary needs as when in the juvenile stage. To meet the dietary needs of a wide range of pollinators, it is important to know that some pollinator species are not active for the entire growing season. During the active period, food and nesting resources must be available. The availability of flowering shrubs or trees for pollen and/or nectar before herbaceous species bloom in the spring is beneficial to some pollinator species. Continuity of bloom from as early in the season to as late in the season as possible is important. A minimum of three species should be in bloom in the spring, summer, and fall, with a total of 26 blooming species being ideal. These species should represent five or more plant families. For the benefit of monarchs, milkweeds should be planted.

While dietary needs of honeybees have much in common with that of native bees, an important difference is that honeybees are attracted to masses of bloom. For that reason, rather than planting a mix of 26 species, multiple mixes should be planted, each with three to four blooming species with no overlapping of bloom within a mix. Bloom over­lap will be provided by the other mixes.

To support the greatest diversity of native pollinators:

  • Provide continuity of bloom from as early to as late in the season as possible.
  • Minimum of three species blooming in spring, summer, and fall.
  • Twenty-six blooming species from 5 or more plant families.
  • Plant milkweeds for monarchs.
Tachinid Fly on Pycnanthemum incanum (Hoary Mountainmint).

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DISCLAIMER: The information in this review of practices is the result of more than 50 years of experience in seed production. Ernst Conservation Seeds has been supplying seeds and consulting in the reseeding of tens of thousands of acres of roadsides, surface mined lands, conservation, and restoration sites in eastern North America, as well as growing and supplying seed and consulting in the planting of hundreds of thousands of acres of CRP/CREP-related areas for erosion control and wildlife habitat. All of these practices are opinion only and our best advice as a result of these experiences. These recommendations do not cover all the conditions that will be encountered in the field. All of the information is for individual consideration. Ernst Conservation Seeds is not responsible for conditions that will be encountered in individual situations. The use of brand names does not represent our endorsement of a specific product; rather, it represents our experience only and has not necessarily been replicated in peer-reviewed research. The use of chemical pest control agents is subject to manufacturers’ instructions and labeling, as well as federal, state, and local regulations.
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