Leafcutter Bees are great summer pollinators!

Leafcutter bees are very similar to Mason Bees in many ways:  they are non-aggressive, non-stinging, medium-sized, solitary cavity nesters, and will readily take up residence in our Solitary Bee Houses.

Mason bee brood cells

A major difference between the two species is the material they use to divide their brood cells. Unlike the Mason Bees, who use mud, the Leafcutter Bees use soft, flexible leaf pieces and flower petals to divide, line and cap their brood cells.  They cut the leaves with their scissor-like mandibles, making smooth, circular or oval cuts from the edges of leaves that are about 1/2″ in diameter.  According to The Xerces Society, it only takes two or three seconds for the female to cut a piece of leaf.  Just before she finishes cutting it, the female starts to beat her wings, so she is already flying by the time the leaf fragment is severed.  How cool is that??

The leaf pieces are then cemented together with salivary secretions and leaf resins. (Some of their favorite leaves are roses, lilac, red bud and Virginia creeper, but they don’t appear to be too choosey.  Please don’t begrudge this housing material to these hard-working mothers! These missing leaf bits don’t damage the plant in any way.

DSCF3260

It takes an average of 15 leaf pieces or flower petals to line one brood cell, and a total of 20 to 30 trips may be required to gather the necessary pollen and nectar to provision just one cell.  Under favorable conditions a female bee may finish an average of 30 cells in her lifetime.  A nesting tunnel filled with Leafcutter brood cells looks a lot like a hand-rolled cigar, and you can’t miss the beautiful green color of a leaf-capped nesting tunnel.

Like the Mason Bee, the Leafcutters provision each brood cell with a mixture of nectar and pollen, lay one egg, then seal the cell, continuing this sequence the length of the tunnel.  When the tunnel is nearly filled with brood cells, the bee will then collect 30 to 50 circular pieces of leaf, which are deposited individually into the nest entrance.Nursery cell made of leaf pieces.

These circular pieces are cemented together, forming a solid plug which is flush with the hole entrance, and serves as a barrier against rain, predators and parasites. The young bees develop and remain within their individual cells, emerging in December/January — seamlessly timed to begin pollinating the summer flowers and vegetables.  Mother Nature, in all her Glory.

Leafcutter Bee Builds a Brood Cell

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjsZ419lmMY

Introduction to the fascinating world of our native bee pollinators

Purchasing a solitary bee house from www.creativewoodcraft.co.nz is your introduction to the fascinating world of our native bee pollinators. It has
been specially designed to attract a variety of gentle, non-stinging native and introduced solitary bee species that nest from early spring through
summer. They might not make honey, but they are extremely efficient pollinators, and your garden will explode with color and produce as a result.

solitary bee house Creative Woodcraft

Visit our web site for more detailed information and photos: Learning about Native Bees is so new to most of us that it can be overwhelming at first, but don’t worry!

We can email you a  seasonal Newsletter that really simplifies it for you by letting you know what you could or should be doing with your native  bees during each season of the year. If you’re interested in receiving it, go to our web site and click on Newsletter, to sign up. Thank you for your interest in our native bee pollinators!

Dr David Pattemore, Research Scientist, Plant & Food Research;

Honeybees are relied on as the cornerstone of crop pollination in New Zealand, because hives can be easily managed and monitored. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that they are the most effective pollinator or that they are sufficient on their own

Alternative pollinators can make significant contributions by promoting cross fertilisation and by supplementing the base pollination service contributed by honeybees

> Check out our specialist range of alternative pollinator habitat and increase pollination in your garden!

Bumble Bee Nesting Box1 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!solitary bee house Creative Woodcraft 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!Bumble Bee Nesting has been successfully ocupied 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!Buterfly Shelter Feeder 7 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!Gardeners Pollination Package Deal 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!bumble bee 150x150 Wild Pollinators Crucial   Increase Pollination in your Garden!

Posted in Bees

If you see this, you have Leafcutter Bees in your garden!

Leafcutter holes on leaves 1

Leaf cuts like these mean that you have efficient pollinators in your garden!
Leafcutter Bees are excellent pollinators of summer flowers.  They cut small ovals and circles out of plant leaves to form brood chambers for their developing young.  No worries!  These cuts won’t damage your plants at all.

To learn more about leafcutter bees, bumble bees and NZ native solitary bees, register at www.creativewoodcraft.co.nz and download our FREE e-book (BEES)

Introduce Leafcutter bees into your garden and increase your summer pollination.

Help us build thousands of homes!

Help Creative Woodcraft give nature a home!

Just as you’re making small changes to build a home for nature where you live, we think big and build homes for nature on a large scale right across the country.

Nature’s heroes…you’re brilliant!

How you can help give nature a home ?…..

Consider purchasing a home for nature from www.creativewoodcraft.co.nz

Banner Creative Woodcraft Green Urban Living

The places that nature calls home, where it raises a family and finds food are precious.

With major change ahead for the Christchurch area and the re-build project underway, there has never been a more important time to consider the effects on nature and the habitat of our wildlife. With increasing regeneration and expansion of urban areas across New Zealand, natures homes are in danger of slowly being destroyed or disappearing altogether.

There is more need than ever before to build homes for nature on a large scale.

Here’s how we do it:

We build wildlife habitat for:

  • Home gardens
  • Conservation Projects
  • School Garden Projects
  • Community Projects

We work with partners

We are always happy to work with and assist nature conservation organisations across NZ, as well as landowners, farmers and businesses.

Together we’re helping transform farms, parks, cities and communities into homes for nature – providing habitat for nature across New Zealand and creating better awareness for everyone.

We campaign and support nature
Decisions made by governments about the way our landscapes and seas are managed have an enormous impact on the wildlife that lives there.

We inspire the young
We help young people get close to nature: in and out of the classroom. We give them the first-hand experiences that lead to a lifelong love of nature, because future generations must love wildlife if they are to protect it.

Together we’re giving homes to a huge range of very special wildlife.

We are always pleased to receive any photos of our products in action!….

We are always pleased to receive any photos of our products in action!….

Apple seed Feeder

So please feel feel to send us photos of your bird, bee,  butterfly, hedgehog and any other of your creative woodcraft products… and be into win a creative woodcraft gift voucher for the best photo. (competition closes November 1st 2013) we will also offer a small discount of your next order for all photo’s received before this date.