A Brief History Of The Urban Bee Project

The contents of this website are the result of years of research. To learn more about our research project and it's history, read on. MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE MORE

Bee Attracting Plants By Region

We have evaluated numerous plants in the San Francisco Bay Area for their relative attractiveness to urban bees. You can click here for a complete list of attractive plants. Take a look also at our shorter list of plants, selected from the long list, which includes the smaller and easier plants to grow for those of you who wish to encourage bees in your gardens within a short period of time. The short list also contains information useful to gardeners about propagation, plant size, flower color, and the bee types and other floral visitors to be expected.

There are about 25,000 species of bees known worldwide. In the U.S. we have almost 4,000 species, and in California slightly more than 1,500 species have been recorded. A complete list of the bees of the San Francisco Bay Area is not yet available, but just in the East Bay cities of Albany and Berkeley 76 species of bees have been identified from residential neighborhoods. These 76 species consist mostly of native California bees distributed among the following five families: Apidae (includes honey and bumble bees), Andrenidae, Colletidae, Halictidae, and Megachilidae (includes leaf-cutter bees). Descriptions of the easily recognized genera and species are presented along with information on their seasonal periods of activity. References are also provided on more detailed information on bees in the U.S. and world.

Bee Monitoring Protocol

Bees are variably but predictably attracted to their host flowers. Some are highly attracted, some are modestly attracted, and others show only a low attraction. In order to quantify the relative attraction of a plant to its bees, we developed a simple monitoring method or protocol. By observing a 1.5m x 1.5m space of flowering vegetation of a given ornamental for 3 minutes it is possible to count the number of bees entering this area and making contact with the reproductive flower part (anthers and stigmas). The number of bees making one appropriate contact and not the number of flowers each bee touches constitutes the visitation count. Once several counts are made and replicated numerous times on different individual plants, an average visitation count or rate is calculated.

This average is then compared with others on a scale of low to high attraction, which provides us with a good predictor of what to expect from a plant and the bee numbers it should attract. If bee types are also noted, a bee diversity figure can also be calculated. Visitation counts are only made on warm, high air pressure days with little or no wind. Also, only plants in full flower are used for the counts. The goal is to select the most optimal weather and plant sconditions for conducting the counts.

Bees Vs. Wasps

Although urbanites often refer to bees and wasps interchangeably, they are different in many respects. Some bees and wasps look similar, but it is their different lifestyle that quickly sets them apart. Bees are interested almost exclusively in pollen and nectar from their host plants and are adapted to use these resources for their energy and reproduction. Wasps, in sharp contrast, are mostly predatory and visit garden plants searching for small prey items like caterpillars. Some of these wasps will occasionally be observed visiting selected flowers where they may take a small drink of nectar; some are searching flowers for small insect prey. Read on to learn more about distinguishing these two common garden visitors.