How squash bees help your garden grow (2024)

Squash bees are found throughout much of the United States and into eastern Canada.|

So much is happening in gardens in July.

Summer is grandly underway, and plants are growing and blooming rapidly. Each week brings new surprises.

In the vegetable garden, memories of all the grinding work of putting in the garden, of pushing wheelbarrow load after wheelbarrow load of compost, of laboriously forming beds, of weeding errant bindweed and Bermuda grass, of assembling all the various components of a drip irrigation system, of tenderly planting a multitude of vegetable starts - have disappeared into oblivion. Now the garden appears to have emerged spontaneously from the ground, and the plants boast of their strength.

Their humble origins are long forgotten and only the future stretches ahead. The seasonal march of the zucchini has begun, and just as you feel caught up, an army of new fruits announce themselves and demand attention.

Our thoughts scour the rank of friends or neighbors who may be potential zucchini recipients, and plots of ambush are laid.

Bouquets of basil, a few cucumbers, a handful of carrots and beets, and a fat bunch of Swiss chard are great disguisers of the zucchini overflow, and act to camouflage and distract from the main purpose of the offering. And yet there are some of us who can’t eat enough of it.

But what pollinates our zucchini? An important and original pollinator of squash and gourds is the squash bee, (Peponapis pruinosa).

It is a ground-nesting, solitary native bee that exclusively gathers pollen from plants in the squash family (genus Cucurbita), including pumpkin and gourds.

The bees may visit other flowers for nectar. Female bees make small burrows in the ground with branching chambers. They gather Cucurbita pollen and form it into balls, then lay an egg on each pollen ball, and repeat this process about five or six times.

The larvae eat the pollen, and then pupate, emerging as adults that summer or the following one. Adult bees feed primarily on nectar.

Squash flowers open at dawn when squash bees are out foraging. These bees make an entrance into the day at dawn and can pollinate all the days squash flowers before honeybees get out of bed.

Squash bees forage until about mid-day, when squash flowers begin to wilt. New flowers emerge each day.

It takes about 6-9 bee visits to pollinate each flower. Cucurbits are completely dependent on bee visitation for pollination as male and female flower reproductive parts are held in separate flowers. Pollen is heavy and held deeply in the voluminous flowers and does not blow in the wind. Before the introduction of honeybees by Europeans, squash bees pollinated indigenous people’s squash and gourd plants throughout the Americas.

Squash bees are found throughout much of the United States and into eastern Canada and are easy to identify.

Simply go out early in the morning and peer into your zucchini flowers. What you are likely to see are the boy bees, who sleep in the flowers while the industrious females sleep in their hard-dug burrows.

Sometimes there will be a conglomeration of four or five boy bees peering back at you. Don’t worry, solitary bees are not defensive and male bees have no stingers. As the flowers wilt at around noon, the males sleep in them (They are able to chew their way out).

The female bees roughly resemble honeybees, but they are slightly larger, broader, have longer antennae, and have very hairy hind legs that loose pollen adheres to. If they are carrying pollen, the hairy legs will be very noticeable. Males do not collect pollen and have a yellow dot on their faces.

Squash bees’ nest in the ground near squash plants. The exterior of the nest may resemble a messy ant nest until you see a bee going in and out. Squash bee nests are a good reason to adopt no-till methods in your vegetable garden. Tilling destroys the nests and the bees in them.

There are many surprises awaiting us in our gardens.

Kate Frey’s column appears every other week in Sonoma Home. Contact Kate at: katebfrey@gmail.com, freygardens.com, Twitter @katebfrey, Instagram @americangardenschool

How squash bees help your garden grow (2024)

FAQs

How squash bees help your garden grow? ›

They are considered extremely effective pollinators. As specialists, they make more contact with reproductive structures in the flower, start earlier in the morning and move rapidly from flower to flower without deviating from other plant species.

What do squash bees do? ›

Squash bees have been shown to be excellent pollinators of zucchini and butternut squashes, among others. If numerous, they thoroughly pollinate all available flowers, rendering later visits of honeybees superfluous.

How do bees help vegetable gardens? ›

Bees are pollinators, so they play an essential role in our gardens and agriculture. Their pollination encourages fruit production, so we rely on them to help us grow our edible crops.

How do bees help plants grow? ›

Bees are essential in growing flowers and plants. They use the process of pollination where they transfer tiny little grains of pollen from the flower of one plant to the flower of another of the same kind of plant. Transferring this pollen helps the flowers to continue to grow.

Do squash bees pollinate cucumbers? ›

Unlike honey bees, which are generalists, squash bees are specialists. They pollinate only members of the cucurbits or squash family, Cucurbitaceae, which includes pumpkins, squash, gourds, cucumbers and zucchini.

What do squash bugs do to your garden? ›

They feed on leaves, vines and even fruit. The damage done by squash bugs is particularly destructive; they pierce plants at multiple sites, causing vines and leaves to collapse as they suck the sap. In addition, squash bug saliva released during feeding carries bacteria that are toxic to cucurbit plants.

How to attract squash bees? ›

To encourage squash bees in your garden, it is best to avoid deep tillage. There have been many mornings when I have seen squash bees emerging from their soil cavities just below the leaves of cucurbits. It is also helpful to maintain untilled, marginal areas in close proximity to your squash patch.

What are the benefits of bees in your garden? ›

Bees pollinate 80% of all flowering plants on Earth. One single bee colony can pollinate 300 million flowers each day. Bee pollination helps to provide nourishing habitats for animals like birds and other insects. Bees are major contributors in the floral landscapes we know and love in nature.

What are the best pollinators for vegetable gardens? ›

Many fruits and vegetables are pollinated by wild native bees, honeybees, flies, wasps, beetles, moths, or butterflies. Although they're not native, honeybees are especially important for pollinating many crops including fruit trees.

What attracts bees to your garden? ›

Wildflowers, Natives and Garden Flowers to Grow

Purple coneflower, cornflower, clover, thistle, poppy, foxglove, aster, goldenrod, milkweed, Joe Pye weed, wild bergamot, African marigold, Black-eyed Susan, zinnia, lupine, echinacea, agastache, liatris, gaillardia, sunflower, rudbeckia, daisy.

Do bees fertilize plants? ›

Honey bees alone pollinate 80 percent of all flowering plants, including more than 130 types of fruits and vegetables. Unfortunately, bee populations have dropped alarmingly across North America, as have the populations of many other pollinator species.

What would happen without bees? ›

In time we would likely lose all the plants that bees usually naturally pollinate. All the wild animals that eat those plants would also struggle to find food. This plant based food shortage could continue along the food chain and eventually affect almost all living creatures on the planet.

What flowers do squash bees like? ›

They have an unusual relationship with plants in the genus Cucurbita, which includes summer squash, winter squash, zucchini, pumpkins, and many gourds (but not cucumbers). Female squash bees provision their nests exclusively with pollen from Cucurbita flowers and often build their burrows in the soil right under the ...

What is the difference between a honey bee and a squash bee? ›

Compared to honeybees, squash bees are larger and bulkier, with longer antennae and rounder faces. The pollen-carrying hairs on their legs (the scopa) are unbranched or nearly so, to accommodate the exceptionally large, coarse pollen of the host plants.

Why are my cucumber plants flowering but no cucumbers? ›

There could be several reasons for this. Only female flowers set fruit, so it depends if your flowers are female or male as to whether they set fruit. The flowers also require plenty of pollination from bees, so try attracting bees into your garden with bee friendly flowers to increase pollination.

Do squash bees sting? ›

Squash bees nest in the ground. They pose no stinging threat, as they don't possess stingers.

What happens if you squash a bee? ›

And although it seems like common sense, bee pathologists have long cautioned beekeepers to avoid crushing bees, since there is abundant evidence that ingested fluids can transmit bacterial septicaemia [3], Chronic Paralysis Virus [4], amoeba and gregarines, IAPV [5], and especially the nosemas [6].

Do you need bees to grow squash? ›

Squash flowers are unisexual, and so require a bee to move pollen from male to female flowers.

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