Pollinator Information
Many kinds of animals are pollinators, including hummingbirds, butterflies, moths, beetles, flies and wasps as well as bees, but this website focuses mainly on bees because they are the most important pollinators of crops in our state, and they are also the focus of recent concerns.
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station has responsibility for the state honey bee registration and inspection program (link to Beekeeper Information and Registration here) and also has active research and public information programs on plants used as sources of nectar and pollen by bees, pollination of crop plants such as pumpkin and winter squash, routes and levels of exposure of bees to pesticides, and the diversity of bees in Connecticut.
Factsheets and Reports:
- Updated April 4, 2022--Protecting Pollinators from Pesticides
- A Citizen's Guide to Creating Pollinator Habitat in Connecticut
- Sample List of Native Trees and Shrubs for Bees through the Season
- Sample List of Native Wildflowers for Bees through the Season
- Proper Timing to Mow Native Plant Meadows Can Protect Pollinator Habitat
- Best Management Practices for Farmers Using Seeds Treated With Neonicotinoid
Insecticides - Bees on Alternative Flowering Plants on Vegetable Farms in Connecticut
- Planting Flowers for Bees in Connecticut
- Ground Nesting Bees
- Pollination of Pumpkin and Winter Squash- Thanks to Bumble Bees!
- Managing the Varroa Mite for Honey Bees in Connecticut Report by the State Entomologist to the General Assembly
Materials from the Conference, Creating and Improving Habitat for Pollinators, 2019
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Kimberly Stoner- Pollinator Habitats – What Can Recent Science Tell Us?
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Nancy Ferlow- Natural Resource Conservation Service – Pollinator Programs
Materials from the Conference, Creating and Improving Habitat for Pollinators, 2018
- Richard S. Cowles - Presentation: Diversionary Plantings and Fixed Land Honey Production
- Steve Munno - Presentation: Creating Habitat for Pollinators at Massaro Community Farm
- Kimberly Stoner - Sources for Pollinator Plants
- Nancy Ferlow - Presenation: NRCS Pollinator Programs 2018
- Kimberly Stoner - Presentation: Protecting Pollinators from Pesticides
- Kimberly Stoner - Resource List for Pollinator Habitat and Pesticides
- Michael Nadeau - Presentation: Site Analysis And Planning Pollinator Plantings
- NRCS- Some Pollinator Plants for CT
- Cynthia Rabinowitz- Plant List for Edible Forest Garden
- Cynthia Rabinowitz - Presentation: Thinking Beyond the Honeybee with Permaculture
- NRCS - Handout: Butterfly Host Plants
Materials from the Conference, Creating and Improving Habitat for Pollinators, 2017
- Eric Venturini – Presentation: Pollination Reservoirs Support Wild Bees and Wild Bees Support Growers: Examples from Maine Wild Blueberry
- Eric Venturini and others – Fact sheet: Enhancing Wild Bees for Crop Pollination – University of Maine
- Virginia Keith – Presentation: Establishing Pollinator Plantings Organically
- Virginia Keith – Handout: Establishing Pollinator Plantings Organically
- Kim Stoner – Presentation: Protection Pollinator Habitat from Pesticides
- Aaron Hoshide – Presentation: Costs to Create & Maintain Your Pollination Reservoir
- Emily May – Links to Resources for Pollinator Habitat on Farmland
Materials from the Conference, Successfully Establishing Plants for Pollinators, 2016
- Speaker Contact List
- Planting Pollinator Habitat-- Dr. Cathy Neal, University of New Hampshire
- Wildflowers for New England Meadows and Pollinator Plantings-- Dr. Cathy Neal, University of New Hampshire
- Native Perennials by Competitive Level-- Larry Weaner
- Establishing Pollinator Plantings-- Virginia Keith, Blueberry Hill Organic Farm
- Establishing Pollinator Plantings Organically Handout-- Virginia Keith, Blueberry Hill Organic Farm
- Estimating Costs of Pollinator Plantings-- Dr. Aaron Hoshide, University of Maine & Dr. Cathy Neal, University of New Hampshire
- Bee Pasture Budget, UNH Example--Dr. Aaron Hoshide, University of Maine (Excel Format)
- Detailed Bee Pasture Budget, UNH Example--Dr. Aaron Hoshide, University of Maine (Excel Format)
- Questions for Estimating Cost of Pollinator Pasture-- Dr. Aaron Hoshide, University of Maine & Dr. Cathy Neal, University of New Hampshire
- Information on Bees and Ways to Help Them
- Xerces Habitat Assessment Guide for Farms and Agricultural Landscapes: http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/PollinatorHabitatAssessment.pdf
- Xerces Northeast pollinator plant list: http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/NortheastPlantList_web.pdf
- Xerces New England pollinator habitat installation guide: http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/InstallGuideJobSheet_NewEngland_CnsrvCvr.pdf
- Ernst Conservation Seed pollinator mixes (although many of their seed ecotypes are from PA, so if you have CT seed sources you prefer, feel free to swap!): http://www.ernstseed.com/product-category/pollinator-favorites/
- The Integrated Crop Pollination Project: www.projecticp.org (our resources page can be found here).
Natural Resources Conservation Service, a Source of Funding for Pollinator Habitat:
General information on pollinators
Cost share programs that provide funding toward pollinator habitat:
Environmental Quality Incentives Program
Conservation Stewardship Program
2016 Pollinator Health Law
Public Act (16-17) does the following:
- Puts some restrictions on the neonicotinoids insecticides that are most highly toxic to bees
- Creates a Pollinator Advisory Committee from the staff of the Experiment Station
- Requires a study of the Varroa mite attacking honey bees and an evaluation of the possibilities of breeding bees resistant to the mites
- Requires the Experiment Station to create a citizen’s guide to model pollinator habitat
- Promotes establishment of pollinator habitat by various state agencies and by utilities
- Sets qualifications for the state apiary inspector
Technical Publications:
Stoner, K. A., Nurse, A., Koethe, R. W., Hatala, M. S., and Lehmann, D. M. (2022). Where Does Honey Bee (Apis mellifera L.) Pollen Come from? A Study of Pollen Collected from Colonies at Ornamental Plant Nurseries. Insects, 13(8). DOI: 10.3390/insects13080744
Stoner, K. A. (2020). Pollination is sufficient, even with low bee diversity, in pumpkin and winter squash fields. Agronomy, 10, 1141. DOI: 10.3390/agronomy10081141 (PDF)
Sponsler, D. B., Grozinger, C. M., Richardson, R. T., Nurse, A., Brough, D. Patch, H. M., and Stoner, K. A. (2020). A screening-level assessment of the pollinator-attractiveness of ornamental nursery stock using a honey bee foraging assay. Sci. Rep., 10, 831. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-57858-2
Zarrillo, T. A. and K. A. Stoner. (2019). The bee fauna of an Atlantic coastal plain tidal marsh community in Southern New England, USA. J. Melittology, 86, 1-34. doi.org/10.17161/jom.v0i86.7334
Stoner, K. A., Richard S. Cowles, Andrea Nurse, and Brian D. Eitzer. (2019). Tracking Pesticide Residues to a Plant Genus Using Palynology in Pollen Trapped from Honey Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) at Ornamental Plant Nurseries. Environmental Entomology.
Stoner, K., Eitzer, B., Cowles, R. (2017). Quantifying Exposure of Bees to Neonicotinoids in Nectar and Pollen of Nursery Plants.
Zarrillo, T. A., J. S. Acher, J. Gibbs, and K. A. Stoner. (2016). New and noteworthy records of bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) for Connecticut. J. Kansas Entomological Society, 89, 138-157.
Stoner, K. A. (2016). Current Pesticide Risk Assessment Protocols Do Not Adequately Address Differences Between Honey Bees (Apis mellifera) and Bumble Bees (Bombus spp.). Front. Environ. Sci. DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2016.00079
Stoner, K. A., and Eitzer, B. D. (2013). Using a Hazard Quotient to Evaluate Pesticide Residues Detected in Pollen Trapped from Honey Bees (Apis mellifera) in Connecticut. PloS One, 8(10). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0077550
Stoner K. A., and B. D. Eitzer. (2012). Movement of Soil-Applied Imidacloprid and Thiamethoxam into Nectar and Pollen of Squash (Cucurbita pepo). PLoS One 7(6). DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0039114.
Additional Resources:
Portraits of a Few Bee Species Native to Connecticut