Mason Bee
Mason Bee
Mason Bee
http://www.metrokc.gov/wsu-ce 919 SW Grady Way, Suite 120 Renton, WA 98055-2980 (206) 205-3100/TTY 711
Male
Female
the nest. In western Washington, mud is almost always available because of the wet climate but in other areas, you can assure a good supply by creating a small depression lined with plastic, filling it with sticky mud and keeping it moist. The bees will visit a wide variety of flowers for their energy source, nectar, and for larval protein food, pollen. They will fly 100 or 200 meters to find flowers, so the nests can be placed some distance away from the food source, although they will thrive when close to their food.
Rustic Method
The rusticculture method con- Straw insert system. sists mainly of augmenting existing bee populations by setting out simple nest blocks. No attempt is made to manage the bees. Simple rustic nest blocks can be made of almost any kind of wood drilled with holes 1/4 to 3/8 in diameter and at least 3 inches deep. An ideal material for this is a 4 X 4 post. The bees will utilize the holes for a year or two but eventually these simple nests will become fouled and the bees will search for other nest sites. New rustic blocks can easily replace used ones. Redrilling the blocks can be done but will not rid the blocks of parasites and pathogens. Washing the blocks or soaking in chlorine bleach solution is usually more trouble than just making new blocks.
2. March-June. Males emerge first to wait for the females. As soon as the females appear, they mate and begin making nests. They may make several nests and lay up to 30 or more eggs total, usually 3 to 10 per nest. Adult mason bees live for only about two months. 3. April-May. Remove and dispose of old (used) straw inserts. By mid-June nesting activity is usually finished and bee parasites begin to appear, so for best management, carefully take the blocks down and bring them inside for the rest of the summer. They can be kept indoors or E.A.Sugden in a fine mesh screen cage in a garage, shed, etc. Handle the nest blocks very gently because the developing larvae inside are fragile. Keep them upright. For rustic management the nest blocks can simply be left in position outdoors but the bees will likely accumulate some parasites over time. Covering the blocks with a bubble of chicken wire mesh can discourage predators such as woodpeckers, crows, and squirrels which may attack if blocks are left in place. The bees will not mind flying through the mesh. 4. September. By September, the larval bees have become adult bees. They will rest inside capsule-like silk cocoons until the next spring. At this time, you can take out the nest-filled straw inserts and replace them with fresh inserts to be colonized by the next generation. The living bees in their nests can be examined now by carefully slicing open some of the paper straws. Unfinished nests or those with few or no bees should be discarded. They may contain diseased or parasitized bees or only males. (Healthy nests should have 2 or more females for every 3 males.) 5. October-February. Store the remaining healthy nests (inserts) over winter in unheated shelter or refrigerators. They will be set out in the spring when the nest blocks are replaced. You can put them in any type of holder attached to or placed near the nest blocks. 6. March. Put fresh straw inserts in the block and reposition the block in the yard or field if it was taken down for winter storage. Start again with Step 1.
Resources
See Fact Sheet 524: Beekeeping Resources for details on suppliers, organizations, and publications.
Updated July 1999 by Dr. Evan A. Sugden, bee biologist with Entomo-Logic, Monroe, WA and Sylvia Kantor, Agriculture Information Coordinator, WSU Cooperative Extension King County. Illustrations by E. A. Sugden and WSU/KC Master Gardener volunteer.
Cooperating agencies: Washington State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and King County. Cooperative Extension programs and employment are available to all without discrimination. Evidence of noncompliance may be reported through your local Cooperative Extension office.