How can I attract the Wool Carder Bee to my garden?
1. The Wool Carder Bee is very fond of certain types of flower. If you
plant these in sunny positions you will have a good chance of attracting
the bee to your patch.
Probably the best plant to try is the well known garden plant, 'Lamb's
Ear' Stachys lanata. Also try smaller flowered foxgloves like
Digitalis lutea and Digitalis grandiflora. The easy to grow
Purple Toadflax Linaria purpurea is also much liked by the Wool
Carder.
2. Provide places for the bee to nest. the easiest way is to drill
holes between 7-10mm diameter in timber around the garden. Or try
installing special bee posts These are easy to make. Just follow the
instructions on our bee post page
3. Avoid using chemicals in your
garden, particularly insecticides. |
What's all the aggravation in aid
of?
The male Wool Carder patrols patches of flowers, fending off
all-comers as a means of attracting females for mating. By keeping other
insects away, he ensures that there is a plentiful supply of nectar for
any potential mate. When a female approaches he will investigate her, and
let her through to feed. In return he attempts to mate. In this way he can
establish quite a harem. I have seen at least five females using a patch
of Lamb's Ear patrolled by a single male.
 |
And
the female?
You might be wondering why this bee is called the Wool Carder? The
bee is named after the female's habit of scraping the hairs off plants,
rather like carding wool. She uses the hairs to line a cavity in a wall,
in timber or any other suitable place. The hairs are gathered together
into a ball. She flies off carrying the ball of wool, which is sometimes
as big as her! If you can watch the females 'carding' plant hairs, you may
be lucky enough to witness one fly off with its cargo of 'wool' - it
really is a fascinating sight. Hairy leaved plants like Lamb's Ear, or
Lychnis coronaria are important for this purpose.
Back at it's cavity nest, the female provisions cells with pollen
collected from plants guarded by the male. She then lays eggs in the cells
which develop into larvae that feed on the pollen provided by the
'mother'.
The following season, in June and July, new males emerge, followed soon
after by females, and the whole cycle starts again. |