Pollinators BMPs
Best Management Practices for Pollinators on New York State Golf Courses 4 Habitat for pollinators includes foraging habitat and nesting sites. Pollinator-friendly habitat contains a diversity of blooming plants of different colors and heights, with blossoms throughout the entire growing season. Native plants are best, proving the most nutritious food source for native pollinators. Even plants we consider weeds provide important habitat. For example, red clover provides an important nectar and pollen source. Providing nesting sites for native species can be accomplished by taking simple steps in out-of-play areas, such as leaving stems and coarse, woody debris and leaving exposed patches of well- drained soil, or by creating nesting areas such as wooden nesting boxes for hole nesting bees (Figures 4 and 5). Pollinator habitat on the golf course includes both the areas renovated specifically with pollinators in mind and the existing out-of-play areas. For example, one of the most effective BMPs for protecting water quality also protects pollinator habitat, i.e., leaving a low or no-management buffer strip around water courses and bodies of water. Opportunities for renovation can be used to enhance the habitat for pollinators with native plants, wildflowers, and flowering trees and Preserving and Enhancing Habitat on the Course shrubs (Figures 6 and 7). Part 2 of our video case study describes the process used to establish native areas during renovations at Rockville Links Club in Rockville Centre on Long Island. For more information see: • Making Room for Native Pollinators , Matthew Shepherd. http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/ uploads/2008/10/making_room_for_pollinators_ usga1.pdf • Pollen specialist bees of the Eastern United States , Jarrod Fowler. http://jarrodfowler.com/specialist_ bees.html • Host plants for specialist bees of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern United States , Jarrod Fowler. Recommendations regarding pollinator plants, native plant nurseries and seed companies, conservation guides, and policies. http://jarrodfowler.com/host_ plants.html • Monarchs in the Rough, a program sponsored by Audubon International and the Environmental Defense Fund to provide superintendents with regionally appropriate seeds to restore monarch butterfly habitat in out-of-play areas. Figure 5. Wood boxes with varying size drill holes provide nesting for different bee species. Figure 4. Bamboo sticks are an easy way to create nesting site for bees.
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