Edmonton conservation group gives bees refuge in wooden hotels - Action News
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Edmonton conservation group gives bees refuge in wooden hotels

Calling all foodies, gardeners, nature lovers and proponents of pollinators: bee hotels are up for grabs from the Edmonton and Area Land Trust so Edmontonians can help preserve the bee population.

Solitary bees live in and lay eggs in trees, unlike honeybees that live in hives

Bee hotels are about 2 1/2 feet tall and have several wooden blocks inside with tunnels where bees can lay eggs. (Nathan Gross/CBC)

Calling all foodies, gardeners, nature lovers and proponents of pollinators:bee hotels are up for grabs from the Edmonton and Area Land Trust so Edmontonians can help preserve the bee population.

The land trust built small, wooden hotels and gave some to community gardens. They also put the hotelsin the Muttart Conservatory, John Janzen Nature Centre andthe Edmonton zoo.

Alana Tollenaar, an intern with the land trust and Bachelor of Sciencestudent at the University of Alberta, explained the projectat the zoo at the Garden Festival Sunday.

"In the city, it's harder for bees to find a place to live," Tollenaar said. "So the bee hotels are actually meant to combat this issue by giving them another place to go and lay their eggs."

Hotels for bees

6 years ago
Duration 1:32
The Edmonton and Area Land Trust built wooden bee hotels and gave some to community gardens. Bee hotels provide a home for solitary bees, which don't live in hives.

They're built for solitarybees, which aresmaller than"social" honeybees. Solitary bees don't live in hives and typically don't sting because there's no queen bee to protect.

They make up about 80 per cent of the bee population, Tollenaarsaid.

Biologist Margaret Reine, advisor for Edmonton and Area Land Trust, has had a bee hotel at her home for two years.

"They're able to reproduce and have more young when there's bee hotels available because it's providing a habitat and a home for them to be able to nest," she said.

The hotels, about 2feet tall and eight inches wide, have wooden blocks inside. Tunnels or tubes are drilled into the wood, which is where bees canlay their eggs.

The eggs stay inside forthe winter and hatch in the spring.

Edmonton and Area Land Trust sells bee hotels for $30 and also hosts workshops for people who want to build their own. (Nathan Gross/CBC)

Reine said urban construction and development aren't the only reasons bee populations are at risk.

The use of pesticides called neonicotinoids is also to blame. Alot of flower and vegetable seeds contain them.

"We should be asking the greenhouses and the people selling these plants to be buying them from people that are not using neonicotinoids," Reinesaid.

"The more consumers ask for that and demand that these plants do not have that in it, the more people will realizethey've got to quit using it or people aren't going to buy it."

She recommendedchecking the labels on garden products to see if they contain neonicotinoids. Key words to look out for areimidacloprid, acetamiprid, dinotefuran, clothianidinand thiamethoxam.

Most of Europe is on board with banning the group of pesticides, and Reine said shethinks Health Canada should follow suit.

The existence of solitary bees is fundamental, as they'remore efficient at pollinating than honeybees, Tollenaarsaid. They encouragethe growth of various foods, from peas to apple trees.

Alana Tollenaar of the Edmonton and Area Land Trust says solitary bees make up about 80 per cent of the bee population. (Nathan Gross/CBC)

"Food I like to eat, everyone likes to eat," Tollenaar said. "That's basically the main reason that we need pollinators. They pollinate over one-third of our food in the world."

People hoping to build their own bee hotelcan find blueprints on the Edmonton and Area Land Trust website. The group also hosts building workshops and sells bee hotelsfor $30.