Gardening helps protect threatened bees in Arizona

At the 2023 Arizona Honeybee Festival in November, put on at Paradise Valley Community College by the Arizona Backyard Beekeepers Association, beekeepers shared advice with community members on how to support Arizona’s bees. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

Arizona Honeybee Festival volunteer Lupine Allen shows attendees her bee education sign, which displays different types of bee species and educational facts about the insects. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

Prescott beekeepers show off their wooden beehive display. They relocate beehives and provide beekeeping education. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

“Save the Bees” is a common phrase used to encourage bee conservation, largely due to declining bee populations from habitat loss and pesticides. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

PHOENIX – Key pollinators in Arizona faced a rough summer, but community efforts can help them thrive.

Arizona is home to the second-most diverse bee population in the country, according to pollination ecologist and bee specialist Stephen Buchmann, who said more than 1,300 native bee species reside in the state. The desert landscape also hosts a large population of honeybees, which, while not native to Arizona, are still important pollinators.

“Honeybees are sort of generalist pollinators, and they’re what we depend on for most of our agricultural pollination in this state,” Buchmann said, “but there are an awful lot of unsung heroines of pollination, and they’re the ground- and twig-nesting bees that we have.”

The Arizona Honeybee Festival, held in November in Phoenix, educates people on bee species, conservation and sustainable desert gardening. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

The Arizona Honeybee Festival, held in November in Phoenix, educates people on bee species, conservation and sustainable desert gardening. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

Most native bees are xerophiles, typically resilient to the hot temperatures and dry climate of the Sonoran Desert, but urban expansion threatens their habitats, Buchmann said. They tend to nest underground in abandoned burrows from other animals and dead or hollowed-out plants. Urban expansion limits their habitat options and puts more space between the bees and the water and food sources they need access to.

Buchmann said that people can attract native bees to their gardens and help them thrive by planting native, desert-acclimated wildflowers.

“We have a big, big diversity of desert wildflowers,” he said. “Not all of them bloom every year, but bee larvae and pupae developing underground can wait years to match the rain and other signals that their wildflower and perennial food plants are getting perfect.”

At the 2023 Arizona Honeybee Festival in November, put on at Paradise Valley Community College by the Arizona Backyard Beekeepers Association, beekeepers shared advice with community members on how to support Arizona’s bees.

According to Mike Hills, a master gardener who presented at the festival, most plants that benefit native bees will also benefit honeybees.

“They’ll feed on most anything that’s gotten nectar or pollen with it,” he said.

Flowers like desert bluebells, penstemon and sunflowers are native to Arizona and do well in the desert climate, providing bees with reliable sources of nectar. Planting them is a good low-maintenance way for community members to support the local bees, as they tend to use less water.

Native bee species are usually equipped to deal with intense heat, but nonnative honeybees aren’t as equipped to survive in harsh conditions.

Arizona Honeybee Festival volunteer Marin Ungvary explains how box hives work and how beekeepers mark the queen bee with a colored dot. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

Arizona Honeybee Festival volunteer Marin Ungvary explains how box hives work and how beekeepers mark the queen bee with a colored dot. (Photo by Hunter Fore/Cronkite News)

Honeybee hives are made of wax, so when it gets hot outside, bees have to constantly supply the hive with water to cool it down. According to Cricket Aldridge, ABBA’s director, the record-breaking heat Phoenix experienced over the summer exacerbated this issue. With water access limited, the bees couldn’t cool down their hives in response to the intense heat.

“The problem is when they go to get the water, the people kill the bees,” she said, noting pools and lakes are common sources of bees’ water. “They never make it back to their hive with the water and their colony dies.”

Aldridge said to help the bees access water, people should create water stations outside their homes so bees can have reliable access to the water they need to cool down their homes.

“You can get a bowl of water with marbles so they don’t drown in a birdbath,” she said. “Anything away from your pool.”

Aldridge hopes that events like the honeybee festival can educate community members about ways to help protect Arizona’s bees and their role in the ecosystem instead of being afraid of them.

“We are part of the ecosystem, we just have to own up to it,” she said.

Kate Duffy(she/her/hers)
News Reporter, Phoenix

Kate Duffy expects to graduate in May 2024 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communication with minors in English literature and digital media literacy. She has written and edited for The State Press and interned at PHOENIX Magazine, The East County Californian and The San Diego Union-Tribune.

Hunter Fore(he/him/his)
News Visual Journalist, Phoenix

Hunter Fore expects to graduate in December 2023 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and a minor in French. Fore has experience as a writer for Phoenix Business Journal and Downtown Devil along with an internship at Times Media Group.