Mason bees always need good mud

NOTE: I have updated this 2016 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information. 

Don’t forget to make sure that your mason bees can find a good source of mud while they are laying their eggs in your tubes.  I discovered a year ago that if you provide a reliable source within a few metres of the bee houses, they will use less energy to gather mud and will therefore be more efficient.

mason bee crawls into the side tunnel
mason bee crawls into the side tunnel

See this post I did. Another observation has led me to believe that they prefer to collect mud in horizontal holes in the side of a trench.  This trench is kept wet throughout the nest-building period, and I dig holes into the walls of the trench.  It is probably an adaptation to prevent predation, as they would be easy targets on an open patch of wet soil.  They also prefer “clayish ” mud, as any good mason knows that their mud needs to be sticky… Sandy doesn’t do it!

This year I gathered some freshly exposed clay and added it to my mud trench.

Holes drilled in clay for a mud source for mason bees
Holes drilled in clay for a mud source for mason bees

 

Monodontomerus wasps: Parasites of Mason Bees

ARCHIVAL: This post has been re-dated from 2015 in order to position it closer in the blog to Mason Bee Information
I find that if I remove a set of Mason Bees from the refrigerator and put them out by the colonies to emerge from their cocoons as the weather warms up, if they are not hatched within a week, and yet look like viable cocoons, you can suspect that they may have Monodontomerus wasp parasites,

I opened several cocoons today and the results are shown below.  In many of the cocoons the bee was still alive, but must be weakened so that they can’t chew their way out. If I got them soon enough before they were being thoroughly eaten, often with small white eggs attached to the outside which the bee brushes off easily, they can fly away after a few minutes.  In the handful of about 100 cocoons that I looked through today, less than 5 % seem to be affected like this.

This external website has  a good video on how Monodontomerus wasps attack mason bees.

This external website provides a method of “candling” to check for Monodontomerus parasitic wasp larvae.

Other links on the websites to parasites

Preparing Mason Bee tubes from Phragmites reeds.

NOTE: I have updated this 2015 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information

In the past two weeks I have been cutting more Phragmites (reed grass) tubes for the mason bee homes.  Its important to get them before the new shoots emerge as they are easily trampled or cut off while you are cutting the stems. About one in 50 stems are of suitable diameter, so it does take some time to get them.  This population is one of the few left in BC.  One theory is that cattle grazing in the early years destroyed most of the native populations along the coastal estuaries.This population may have been spared because of the poisonous “arrow grass”– Triglochin sp. that is common in this marsh, so it was fenced from the earliest times on.

This phragmites is the native variety. In Eastern Canada however, there are populations of the introduced variety that are a serious invasive species.

The fawn lilies , Erythronium sp. are in bloom now so they can benefit from the pollination by the mason bees also.
The fawn lilies , Erythronium sp. are in bloom now so they can benefit from the pollination by the mason bees also.

I have a few of these tubes available for pickup in Metchosin. See this page re purchase:https://www.gfletcher.ca/?p=1

Mason Bee Morgue

So that’s what we call them when people drill holes into blocks of wood and then never clean them out. The result is an eventual loss of the colony from an ever increasing infestation of mites.

If you aren’t willing to look after and properly clean your colony every year in the fall, then you are not doing a service to help in pollination, you are harming it.

 

Phragmites Reeds for Mason Bee tubes

NOTE: I have updated this 2015 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information

Phragmites in estuary/marsh
Last years stems of Phragmites in estuary/marsh being harvested for mason bee tubes. It is important that this is done only before new shoots start to emerge.  I have a theory that this native Phragmites exists in this marsh only because the marsh was fenced in the early years to prevent grazing by cattle and sheep. It has been eliminated from most of the other marshes in BC by grazing (personal communication with Robert Prescott-Allen). The reason this marsh was fenced was that the plant Triglochin maritima  (Sea arrow grass) grows in the marsh and it is toxic to grazers.

(http://metchosinmarine.ca/gf/triglochin-maritima/)

“Seaside arrow-grass (Triglochin maritima) is a native plant found sporadically across Canada in saline, brackish, or fresh marshes and shores. This plant contains cyanogenic glycosides, which can release HCN during mastication by animals. Poisoning occurs primarily with ruminants, including cattle and sheep. The concentration of toxic chemicals increases during times of moisture depletion (Majak et al. 1980, Cooper and Johnson 1984, Poulton 1989).”

 

 

 

Parasites of Mason Bee Colonies.

  • NOTE: I have updated this 2016 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information

  • Occasionally I will take a sample of several dozen cocoons that are in cold storage and test them for viability. The longer they remain in storage before release, the more likely that some parasites will get a better head start.
  • SEE OTHER POSTS on this site for entries on Parasites

Once the temperatures are up on sunny days, cocoons placed out near their prospective homes will start cutting their way out of the cocoons and fly off to get materials to fill their own tubes for the coming year.  If there are remaining cocoons unopened after a week and a half of warm weather, then it may be worthwhile to check them for parasites. You can open a cocoon with a sharp box-cutter blade, carefully picking away at the tough cocoon. If the bees are healthy they will leave within a few minutes. You may encounter the following parasites and if so you should get rid of them.  I have included some here that I not quite sure about  as well.  These parasites are natural, but when, as with many monocultures  we concentrate many of one species together, the chance of pests finding a good place to thrive is increased.

frasse
The small black cigars are frasse, (insect manure.)

iNaturalist postings— Garry Fletcher, Metchosin BC

 

I have been posting my photos of different species I have encountered on the iNaturalist website.  Many are species I have found here in the Metchosin Community.

https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&user_id=garryfletcher&verifiable=any

&

Mason Bee Homes Made by our Customers

NOTE: I have updated this 2015 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information

I will use this page to mount pictures sent back by customers who have made their own houses out of recycled materials or have set up experiments to test the materials.

 

Metchosin Biomass Study


The following is from the Goldstream Gazette, March 16, 2021

Metchosin study explores whether local insect populations follow global trends

A 2017 study found a 70 per cent decline in insect biomass over 27-year period in Germany

  • Mar. 16, 2021 6:00 p.m
  • Garry Fletcher (right) and Brenda Costanzo, a senior vegetation specialist for the B.C. environment ministry, stand by a Malaise trap set up on Fletcher’s Metchosin property. The trap is collecting flying insects that will help Neville Winchester, a University of Victoria professor, see what’s happening to local insect populations. (Photo courtesy Neville Winchester)

An entomologist has teamed up with 19 rural Metchosin homeowners to learn more about Greater Victoria’s insect volumes and see if the region’s trends match concerning ones emerging globally.

Neville Winchester, a University of Victoria professor and conservation biologist, receives around half a million flying insects that get collected from Metchosin properties every year. His study started in 2018 and will need about 10 years before he can start identifying the trends of what’s happening to insect biomass here.

“It’s really a biodiversity-driven project,” Winchester said. “Biodiversity is important to maintain ecosystem functioning and provide ecosystem services.”

The project was inspired by a 2017 study that found insect biomass had declined by 75 per cent over a 27-year period in 63 of Germany’s protected natural areas.

READ: Scientists decry death by 1,000 cuts for world’s insects

“We decided, ‘Hey we should start our own project and see if this is happening here in B.C.,’” Winchester said.

Metchosin was picked because of its “intact” natural areas and the interest from residents. Passive flight interception traps are set up to catch and collect flying insects. The citizen scientists then deliver the collections to Winchester every two weeks from May to October. The researcher splits the insects into about seven different groups and weighs the collections.

Winchester is establishing a baseline that will be key to seeing any trends that emerge over time. “Is it declining, is it staying somewhat stable or is it increasing?” he said.

Local insect populations are vital to the food we eat, the researcher said. “If insects started to drop out that were pollinators, who would pollinate food crops? If insects are dropping out, then that is not a good thing, so what are we doing to cause that or are there things we can be doing to reverse that.”

READ: Lack of bees, pollination limiting crop yields across U.S., B.C., study finds

The study is taking variables like weather, elevation and the area’s plant types into account. Winchester says a combination of factors will likely impact the insect population trends.

The professor meets regularly with each homeowner involved to talk about data he’s getting from their properties. Winchester said the Metchosin residents’ enthusiasm for the project means it’ll likely keep going for many years.

“They’re interested in the results and they’re interested in what’s happening on their property and what’s happening, in general in the district,” he said.

Winchester has spent much of his career in the canopies of massive old growth forests around Vancouver Island and the world — researching insect species and their ecological impact. The creatures may be small, but the role they play is not.“I think (people) care about it and they certainly should care about it.”

See an earlier story on this https://www.goldstreamgazette.com/news/new-uvic-study-to-track-decline-of-insects-in-metchosin/https://www.goldstreamgazette.com/news/new-uvic-study-to-track-decline-of-insects-in-metchosin/

Mason Bee Houses–Make your own

There are various values in the commercial community in regards to increasing the presence of Mason Bees as pollinators. Some items for growing Mason bees currently on the market tend to appeal more to the human than the bee, and people are willing to pay for these.

However in order to increase the populations of Mason Bees for our interests in pollination of our plants, more emphasis could be placed on providing homes that bees find favourable for their sole purpose: that of increasing their progeny.

At recent “Seedy Saturday” events, I have been encouraging people to use recycled materials to build houses and then to send back pictures of what type of structure they have come up with. Below are a few examples for a start.

A pill bottle with a hole for the bees to exit is attached to the water pipe
A pill bottle with a hole for the bees to exit is attached to the water pipe

 

I do have available for sale several of these 2 inch water pipes  with 2 dozen + tubes inside for $15.00.

NOTE: I have updated this 2016 post in order to make it appear closer to the other mason bee information