The Urban Bee Project's Protocol
For Data Collection (a.k.a. Bee Monitoring)
All
of our work in the wild and urban areas of northern California is
based on what we call “Bee Frequency Counts.” These
counts are used to assess bee-flower relationships – that
is, to get a picture of which bees like what flowers when. By carefully
observing flowers and the bees that visit them, we can begin to
determine what bees and flowers are present during different times
of the year, which bees visit which kinds of flowers, and how attractive
different flower species are to bees. (CD8-007)
Materials
Best Procedures For Monitoring
1.) Take a look outside and make sure it’s
nice day! Sunny, warm days of 70°F or higher, with little to
no wind are optimal for bees. (DIA_0040) Generally, bees
are out and about between 10:30am and 3pm. However, it is fun (and
important) to experiment with monitoring at different times of day
(106). We may be surprised to find that some flowers offer
nectar much earlier or later than the set time, coaxing the bees
out of bed.
2.) Survey the garden for those patches of flowers
that are in full bloom – these are the patches on which you
will be monitoring. (Coreopsis: Tickseed) Sometimes, patches
of flowers will not quite be in full flower, or may be starting
to go out of season. These patches can also offer good information,
and you will have to use your judgment to determine whether the
patches are good enough to monitor.
3.) In order to assess the bee-attractiveness of
a flower species, it is important to know what flower species you
are monitoring! Hopefully, the flower patch will be labeled with
the flower’s scientific name. If it has only a common name,
you may be able to look it up in an ornamental plant guide such
as Sunset Western Garden Book. If the patch is not
labeled, your best bet is to pick a branch or two with flowers and
leaves and bring it to a nursery for identification.
4.) Choose your first flower patch (1.5m X 1.5m
or the equivalent in case of linear plantings) and begin by filling
out the Bee Frequency Data Sheet
(PDF format). You will need to include information about the weather,
your monitoring site, the flower patch, and nearby flowering plants.
You will need a Data Sheet for every flower patch you monitor.
5.) Then, without getting too close to the flowers
(so as not to scare away the bees) begin your counts. Each count
should take 3 minutes. You will need to check your watch often to
make sure you are counting for the right amount of time. Be sure
to count every bee that lands on the reproductive parts of the flower
(Cosmos bipinnatus) (usually the pollen or nectar center),
distinguishing between honey bees, bumble bees, large bees, and
small bees. You can write these down as you see them, but you must
be careful to keep watching the flowers even as you write so as
not to miss a bee. It may be easiest to make a little chart (see
below), simply putting a mark under the appropriate category when
you count a bee:
Honeybee |
Bumblebee |
Large
Bee |
Small
Bee |
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Finally, you must make sure to count each bee only
once. It is not accurate to count the same bee landing on the same
flower over and over again. With a little practice you will be able
to keep track, in your peripheral vision, of all the bees you have
already counted. If they fly outside the patch area and then return
for more nectar, they can be counted again. Otherwise, you can leave
their repeated visits out of your counts.
6.) Repeat these counts 4-5 times. It is best to
step away from the flower patch for a few minutes between each repetition
so that bees that were frightened off will return. During this time,
you can continue filling out the “Counts” section of
your Data Sheet. If possible, do each count on a different section
of the same flower patch. If the flower patch is larger than 1.5m
X 1.5m, you can divide the patch up into several sections for counting
(24. Teucrium: Germander). If not, you can try to do counts from
different angles (sides, back, and front). In the second case it
is especially important to let the patch “rest” for
a few minutes between each count.
7.) Take note of anything unusual or interesting
you saw, such as descriptions of bee types, bee behaviors (like
bees chasing each other around flowers), and different types of
flower visitors (wasps, butterflies, flies). Enter these notes into
your field journal, including a description of the weather, the
time, what flowers you monitored, and anything else that caught
your eye. You may even want to include sketches of the bees and
flowers you monitored. Be creative!
8.) Sometimes flower patches of the same species
can attract different frequencies of bees depending on whether they
are surrounded by other attractive bee flowers or are isolated in
a yard (34. Sierra St., bee gardn). It also may be that one
particular patch may be producing more or less pollen and/or nectar
treats for their bee visitors. In order to get an overall picture
of a flower species’ attractiveness, you should try to locate
other patches of this flower species in your area and repeat the
frequency counts on at least three different patches. The overall
attraction of the species can be categorized as follows: The plant
is highly attractive (Common) if it averages more than 5 bees per
3 minutes; it is moderately attractive (Occasional) if it averages
between 1 and less than 5 bees per 3 minutes; it has a low attraction
if it averages between 0.5 and less than1 bee per 3 minutes
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