Module 3
Activity C: Pollinator Real Estate
Participants will:
- Learn about the nesting habits of various pollinators.
- Practice observation skills.
Materials & Equipment needed:
- Empty flowerpot
- 2 blocks of a soft wood, such as pine, 4" x
4" x
8" (Do not use pressure-treated wood!)
- Drill and bits from 1/8 to 3/4" in diameter
- Hollow plant stems such as bamboo in varying lengths; bamboo poles
can be purchased at nurseries.
- Science Experiment Record Sheets
Getting ready:
- This activity can be done as a group or used as a take-home
activity.
- Assemble materials and equipment.
- Scout around for a location near some trees and bushes that is in
sunlight and won't be disturbed by pets and other kids.
- For more information on building nesting sites, visit Xerces Society's
Nests
for Native Bees.
Grouping
Whole group or individual take-home activity Action:
- If the group was able to go on a field trip and learn about the
habitat of various pollinators ask them to recall some of the things
they learned
about pollinator nesting habits. If the group was not able to have
the field experience, give a brief overview of the nesting habits of
various
bees and other pollinators.
Hollow pieces of stems or bamboo, cut
to varying lengths and bound together.
Pollinator "condo" — holes should not extend all
the way through the board.
- Explain that the group is going to
provide three types of nests in order to discover first-hand where
pollinators like to live. Describe
each type of nest:
a. pile of hollow plant stems, such as bamboo, in varying
lengths
b. an upside-down, empty flower pot that has holes on the bottom
so insects can enter and leave
c. a pollinator condo made from wood. Drill 6 to 10, 6-inch-deep
holes of 1/8 to 3/4-inch diameter on one side of the board. Be sure
the holes
don't go completely through the wood. (An adult should do the actual
drilling.)
- With the group, locate the site for the experiment and decide where
to put each type of nest. Divide into three groups, each group setting
up
one of the experimental nests. Condos should be placed facing the
sun.
- Have groups check their section once a week and record what animals
have made these houses their homes. The nesting sites should not
be disturbed. They can use their field journals to record their observations
each week
either by writing or drawing pictures.
- Encourage group members to research the nesting habits of native
bees and other pollinators important to the area by using the library
or the Internet.
- After a few weeks hold a group discussion where the participants
can share the results of their observations and answer the following
questions:
a. What type of animals did each house attract? Are any of these
animals pollinators?
b. Why do you think a certain type of animal decided to live in
a certain type of house?
c. How many bees or wasps are living in your condos?
d. How could you make these homes even more attractive and suitable
for their animal inhabitants?
- Challenge students to watch for possible nesting areas in their
yard or neighborhood and record their observations in their field journal.
Adapted from Vanishing Pollinators, a publication of the Smithsonian
National Zoological Park and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
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