Planting Pollinator Grocery Stores

Written by: Meghan Duell

show/hide words to know

Annual plant: a plant that grows and flowers over multiple seasons or years before dying......more

Forage: to look for food. The word, forage, is mainly used when looking for seeds and plants... more

Mutualism: an interaction between two organisms that benefits both of them. Sometimes one of the two organisms lives and multiplies into the other one, which is called the host.

Native: something that naturally occurs, grows, or lives in a specific location... more

Perennial plant: a plant that grows and flowers in one season before dying......more

Phenology: the timing of seasonal plant and animal life cycles and activities.

Temperate climate: a climate in which conditions are moderate throughout the year, without extreme hot, cold, wet, or dry periods.

Urbanization: The process in which humans gather in a common location and develop the environment. For example, creating roads and buildings is urbanization... more

What's in the Story?

Grocery produce

If we only ate produce that was grown nearby and was in season, we would have far fewer options at the grocery store. Image by Liz West.

When humans get hungry, they head over to the nearest grocery store and buy whatever food they feel like. But what do bees and butterflies do when they get hungry?  Without any grocery stores of their own, they have to find their food in the flowers that bloom in the wild. However, since their favorite flowers don’t grow year-round, finding food can be hard. To make matters worse, the flowers they like to eat don’t have a lot of room to grow with all the cities in the world expanding and taking up more space. If you live in the city and you’re wondering how to help the bees, butterflies, and other pollinators, you aren’t alone. Scientists tried to figure out the answer in the PLOS Biology article “Food for Pollinators: Quantifying the Nectar and Pollen Resources of Urban Flower Meadows.”

Where do Pollinators Get Their Groceries?

In the US, we can’t grow fruits and vegetables year-round, because we live in a temperate climate. That means we have seasons, such as winter, when it gets too cold for certain plants to grow.  But come December, when you and your parents go to the grocery store, you can still buy bananas. So, where are all of these fruits and veggies coming from? They don’t just magically appear on the shelves. In the US, we import, or buy and ship in these foods from warmer places, such as Mexico, where they grow year-round.

Bee pollinating flower

Honey bees search out flowers to pollinate, but can have a hard time finding them in big cities. Image by Louise Docker.

Pollinators don’t have it so easy. They have to figure out what to eat and when to eat it depending on the seasons. For example, pollinators like bees, flies, butterflies, beetles, bats, and some birds need to figure out when certain plants that they like are going to flower, so they can forage, or find the food they depend on: pollen and nectar.

When plants flower and when pollinators eat falls under a scientific term called phenology, meaning the timing of important biological events. It is really important to understand plant and pollinator phenology, because plants and pollinators interact through mutualisms. This means they depend on each other to survive. Plants need pollinators to spread their pollen around so they can reproduce and grow fruits. Pollinators depend on the food plants have in their flowers. If plant and pollinator phenologies don’t happen when they are expected to, then the plants may not get pollinated and the pollinators may go hungry.

Pollinators in the Big City

In temperate places, plant and pollinator phenology depends on the changing of the seasons. Oftentimes, the cues for this changing season is a change in temperature. Because of this, phenology can be very sensitive to climate change and human activities, such as building cities that store more heat. Scientists started noticing that as the human population has grown and built bigger cities, people have destroyed and affected a lot of natural habitats.

Boston from a drone

Urbanization reduces the number of nearby pollinators. Click for more detail.

Now there seem to be less pollinators around. Many scientists have started studying why urbanization, or the growth of cities, is reducing the number of nearby pollinators. They are finding that cities have fewer types of plants that pollinators like, that pesticides used for farming are hurting pollinators, and that climate change affects plant and pollinator phenology. These things combined are very bad news for pollinators, for the plants that depend on them, and for us humans who like to eat the fruits and veggies that come from these plants.

Some people have tried to fix the problem themselves by replanting natural habitats in open spaces in cities. For the most part, people add pollinator-friendly plants to their gardens and meadows, but people also establish new gardens in their yards or on their roofs, start beekeeping, or make special homes ("pollinator hotels") to help prevent pollinators from leaving. Creating these spaces is kind of like planting grocery stores and building homes for pollinators. Unfortunately, we’re not sure if these gardens provide the best food for pollinators at the best times. Scientists have been studying what people are planting in pollinator gardens to make sure it is actually helping.

Testing the Quality of Pollinator Grocery Stores

Flower nectar graph

Native weeds often hold more nectar for pollinators than non-native perennial or annual plants. Click for more detail.

Scientists in the United Kingdom set up experimental urban meadows in four different cities. They planted mixes of perennial plants and annual plants in each place in 2012. Then, one year later, they measured when the plants flowered and how much food (nectar and pollen) they provided to pollinators during an entire season. They found out that the perennial plant mix provided more food for longer, but that both mixes did not provide food throughout the whole pollinator foraging season since most of the plants flowered at the same time.

Keeping Urban Pollinators Happy

These scientists figured out that while these pollinator gardens are a step in the right direction, they aren’t the best they can be for pollinators. Essentially, these pollinator grocery stores don’t provide the best food reliably all season, but instead produce a lot of food all at once toward the middle of the season, which leaves some pollinators hungry and makes others have to leave in search of food during the other parts of the season. If our grocery stores only offered different types of fruits and vegetables for one month a year, we’d be pretty unhappy, too. Pollinators that can store food, like honey bees that store honey, may be able to handle seasons with lower nectar availablity.

Beetle pollinating flower

If you plant a pollinator garden, make sure to choose diverse plants, and try to stick to locally native plants as much as possible. And remember, honey bees aren't the only pollinators that need your help. Click for more detail.

Overall, these scientists suggest that we need to think harder about which plants we plant for pollinators in urban gardens and meadows, to make sure that there are enough different kinds of plants to provide lots of high quality food throughout the whole pollinator foraging season. As the human population grows, so will our cities, and more natural habitats will be damaged or destroyed. Due to that fact, we need to start thinking of better ways to live in cooperation with plants and animals, so that all of the species and nature we need and love, like pollinators, don’t disappear.


Additional images via Wikimedia Commons. Hummingbird image by Mdf, edited by Laitche. Story menu flower by Frank Vincentz.

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Bibliographic details:

  • Article: Planting Pollinator Grocery Stores
  • Author(s): Meghan Duell
  • Publisher: Arizona State University School of Life Sciences Ask A Biologist
  • Site name: ASU - Ask A Biologist
  • Date published: June 30, 2017
  • Date accessed: November 22, 2024
  • Link: https://askabiologist.asu.edu/plosable/planting-pollinators

APA Style

Meghan Duell. (2017, June 30). Planting Pollinator Grocery Stores. ASU - Ask A Biologist. Retrieved November 22, 2024 from https://askabiologist.asu.edu/plosable/planting-pollinators

American Psychological Association. For more info, see http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/10/

Chicago Manual of Style

Meghan Duell. "Planting Pollinator Grocery Stores". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 30 June, 2017. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/plosable/planting-pollinators

MLA 2017 Style

Meghan Duell. "Planting Pollinator Grocery Stores". ASU - Ask A Biologist. 30 Jun 2017. ASU - Ask A Biologist, Web. 22 Nov 2024. https://askabiologist.asu.edu/plosable/planting-pollinators

Modern Language Association, 7th Ed. For more info, see http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/08/
Hummingbird gathering nectar

In urban areas, we need to try harder to help out our pollinators, such as bees, flies, moths, butterflies, hummingbirds, and bats.

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