Planning for Spring’s Garden? Bees, Crucial Pollinators, Like Variety

If you want to offer flowers that have the highest protein content to nourish the next generation of strong pollinators, consider plants from the pea family (Fabaceae), such as dwarf indigo, false indigo and bush clover.
If you want to offer flowers that have the highest protein content to nourish the next generation of strong pollinators, consider plants from the pea family (Fabaceae), such as dwarf indigo, false indigo and bush clover.
Aaaarianne/Envato
Share
If you want to offer flowers that have the highest protein content to nourish the next generation of strong pollinators, consider plants from the pea family (Fabaceae), such as dwarf indigo, false indigo and bush clover.
If you want to offer flowers that have the highest protein content to nourish the next generation of strong pollinators, consider plants from the pea family (Fabaceae), such as dwarf indigo, false indigo and bush clover.
Aaaarianne/Envato
Planning for Spring’s Garden? Bees, Crucial Pollinators, Like Variety
Copy

In order to reproduce, most flowering plants rely on animals to move their pollen. In turn, pollinators rely on flowers for food, including both nectar and pollen. If you’re a gardener, you might want to support this partnership by planting flowers. But if you live in an area without a lot of green space, you might wonder whether it’s worth the effort.

I study bees and other pollinators. My new research shows that bees, in particular, don’t really care about the landscape surrounding flower gardens. They seem to zero in on the particular types of flowers they like, no matter what else is around.

To design a garden that supports the greatest number and diversity of pollinators, don’t worry about what your neighbors are doing or not doing. Just focus on planting different kinds of flowers – and lots of them.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

A K-12 art showcase, archive transcription workshop and summer reading kickoff highlight a busy May schedule
New signal allows for strong statewide broadcast
Ocean State Media plans to move a patchwork system of five stations into a unified broadcast network by June 30
The satire follows a ragtag group looking to save transit from ‘Governor McCar’
The documentary explores the Great Salt Lake’s collapse — and a Providence screening asks what lessons it holds for New England