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Insect hotel

An insect hotel, also known as a bug hotel or insect house, is a manmade structure created to provide shelter for insects. They can come in a variety of shapes and sizes depending on the specific purpose or specific insect it is catered to. Most consist of several different sections that provide insects with nesting facilities – particularly during winter, offering shelter or refuge for many types of insects. Their purposes include hosting pollinators.

Insect house in Parkend, the Forest of Dean, UK

Purpose Edit

Many insect hotels are used as nest sites by insects including solitary bees and solitary wasps. These insects drag prey to the nest where an egg is deposited. Other insects hotels are specifically designed to allow the insects to hibernate, notable examples include ladybirds (ladybugs) and, arguably, butterflies.

Insect hotels are popular amongst gardeners and fruit and vegetable growers due to their role encouraging insect pollination. Some elaborately designed insect hotels may also be attractions in their own right and, increasingly, can be found in pub gardens and various tourist locations.

The introduction of insect hotels into a habitat provides valuable housing for beneficial insects. Impacts can be seen in the form of better soil quality, increased pollination, elevated ecosystem diversity, and reductions in the populations of detrimental insects.[citation needed]

Different hotels for different insects Edit

 
Ladybird hotel
 
Bee hotel in Grimbergen, Belgium
 
Bee hotel and Insect hotel in La CasaRoja Farm, Asturias, Spain.

Good materials to build insect hotels with can include using dry stone walls or old tiles. Drilled holes in the hotel materials also encourage insects to leave larvae to gestate. Therefore, different materials, such as stones and woods are recommended for a wide range and diversity of insect life. Logs and bark, and bound reeds and bamboo are also often used. The various components or sizes of holes to use as entry of an insect hotel attract different species. Ready-made insect hotels are also found at garden centers, and particularly ecological and educational conservational centers and organisations.

Solitary bees and wasps Edit

Solitary bees, and solitary wasps do not live within a hive with a queen.

Various species of solitary bees have different needs. The vast majority of these nest in tunnels dug in bare soil, but carpenter, mason, and leaf cutter bees nest in a tube. Only the latter two types nest in ready-made tubes in a bee hotel. They have species-specific preferences for tube diameter (2-10 mm) and length (about 10 cm). A fertilized female makes a series of cells in a tube, one egg per cell provisioned with pollen and sealed with mud or leaf cuttings, respectively. These bees spend most of their life in a cell, as larva then cocoon over winter. They emerge in spring timed to pollinate fruit and almond trees. Males live very briefly as adults, just long enough to mate with females, who live just long enough to complete nesting.

A common type of bee hotel is created from a wooden log, portion of a cut tree trunk or a stone block in which holes are drilled of different sizes (e.g. 2, 4, 6 and 8 mm) with the openings a few centimeters apart. The holes are slightly tilted upwards from the opening so rainwater can drain out, and are drilled about 10 cm into the material, while keeping the end solid. The entrances to these burrows must be smooth enough so that the delicate bodies of the insects are not damaged, with the exterior of wooden bee hotels being frequently sanded.

The best location for a bee hotel is a warm and sheltered place, such as a southern-facing (in the northern hemisphere) wall or hedge. The first insects are already active towards the end of winter and would be actively seeking for such a place to settle.

Other species like to furnish their nests with clay, stone and sand, or in between bricks.

A bee hotel should be in place for only one season, replaced with fresh material in spring. This is because some solitary wasps lay eggs in the egg, larva, or coccoon of tube nesting bees. The cells may also contain fly maggots or pollen mites that killed the bee larva. Clean tubes for the nesting bees in spring will also remove parasitoid larva, failed bee larva, and other detritus.

Many fans of these bees now put out blocks of wood with tubes drilled and cut so that the layers can be separated to view and remove tube contents during the winter. Others prefer cardboard tubes, each lined with a replaceable paper tube or designed to be torn open. In all three cases, healthy cocoons are removed to an emergence box, kept cool over winter, and put out as spring buds break. Parasitoids are destroyed.

A simple bundle of bamboo or reeds, tied or put in an old tin can and hung in a warm place, may be suitable for some solitary bees. The bamboo must be cut in a specific way to allow entry for the insects. Often people may add stems of elderberry, rose or blackberry shoots whose marrow can serve as a food source as well.

Butterflies Edit

Butterflies that hibernate prefer sheltered places such as crevices in houses and sheds, or enclosed spaces such as those in bundles of leaves. Some insect hotels incorporate special butterfly enclosures with vertical slits that take into account the animals' sensitive wings, but the suitability of these enclosures for butterflies is disputed.[1][2]

Parasitic insects Edit

By using an insect hotel, parasitic insects are also attracted to make use of the facilities. Cuckoo bees and wasps will lay their eggs within the nests of others in order to provide them with readily available food upon hatching without the parent insect having to provide for them.

Hotels also attract predatory insects which help control unwanted bugs. For example, earwigs are good to have present in and near fruit trees as they eat the plant lice that may settle on the tree and disturb fruit growth. A terracotta flower pot hung upside-down, filled with bundles of straw or wood wool is an ideal house for earwigs. Ladybirds are easy to cater for by placing many twigs within an open wooden box on its side to provide many small cavities. Ladybirds prefer to hibernate in larger groups so this will encourage many to settle in one specific place. Isopods have their usefulness as scavengers in the garden. These animals like large gaps between stacked bricks and roof tiles to shelter from rain and to hide from predators.

Environmental impacts Edit

Insect hotels are generally thought to be a positive force in restoring or maintaining wild pollinator populations, especially native bees, many of which are endangered due to various factors such as competition with introduced bees like the western honey bee.[3] Insect hotels are especially thought to be a valuable resource for insects that have had their primary natural habitat destroyed. An example is Anthidium palliventre, which were common in the sand dunes of the San Francisco area – the species has struggled as the dunes have mostly been paved over for urban development.[4] Such insects are often forced to find alternative housing, such as in city parks, typically with less success. Over half of North America's native wild bees face similar difficulties, and the actual number is possibly greater due to insufficient data on certain species.[5] Bee hotels are sometimes constructed, whether by private actors, such as well-meaning homeowners and gardeners, or by government-led conservation projects, in attempts to remedy this issue and provide habitat to stabilize struggling native bee populations.[6]

A few recent studies suggest the possibility, however, that bee hotels, in particular, might do more harm than good in certain situations. In a 2020 study, urban bee hotels in the city of Marseille, France, were found to be primarily inhabited by an exotic bee species, M. structuralis, whose presence correlated with lower native bee numbers in the area.[7] A separate study in 2015 reported that bee hotels might be habitats for introduced bees and native bee natural enemies such as predatory and parasitic wasps, rather than habitats for endangered native bees, as well as potentially being foci of insect diseases and further putting native bees at risk.[8] Special attention must be given to the details of insect hotels, such as the diameter of the holes, as this is a key factor in which insects are attracted to the hotel - a variation in diameter of just 1 mm can make the difference between providing habitat for native bees with more specialized habitat needs, or the more generalist adaptable introduced bees they compete with. An alternative solution entirely might be more beneficial for conservation, however, as most wild solitary bees tend to nest underground and are not usually attracted to bee hotels.[6]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Johnson, Terry W. "Out My Backdoor: Do Butterfly Boxes Work?". Out My Backdoor. GA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  2. ^ Hoskins, Rachel (12 July 2019). "How to make a butterfly house: a step by step guide". Woodland Trust. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
  3. ^ Russo, Laura; de Keyzer, Charlotte W; Harmon-Threatt, Alexandra N; LeCroy, Kathryn A; MacIvor, James Scott (August 2021). "The managed-to-invasive species continuum in social and solitary bees and impacts on native bee conservation". Current Opinion in Insect Science. 46: 43–49. doi:10.1016/j.cois.2021.01.001. PMID 33540109. S2CID 231818342.
  4. ^ "Small Wonders: The Plight and Promise of California's Native Bees". California Native Plant Society. 25 June 2021. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  5. ^ "Landmark Report: Hundreds of Native Bee Species Sliding Toward Extinction". www.biologicaldiversity.org. Retrieved 29 May 2022.
  6. ^ a b Geslin, Benoit; Ropers, Lise; Zakardjian, Marie; Flacher, Floriane (26 January 2022). "The misplaced management of bees". doi:10.22541/au.164319695.57033003/v1. S2CID 246303072. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Geslin, Benoît; Gachet, Sophie; Deschamps-Cottin, Magali; Flacher, Floriane; Ignace, Benjamin; Knoploch, Corentin; Meineri, Éric; Robles, Christine; Ropars, Lise; Schurr, Lucie; Le Féon, Violette (May 2020). "Bee hotels host a high abundance of exotic bees in an urban context". Acta Oecologica. 105: 103556. Bibcode:2020AcO...10503556G. doi:10.1016/j.actao.2020.103556. S2CID 218955482.
  8. ^ MacIvor, J. Scott; Packer, Laurence (18 March 2015). Nascimento, Fabio S. (ed.). "'Bee Hotels' as Tools for Native Pollinator Conservation: A Premature Verdict?". PLOS ONE. 10 (3): e0122126. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1022126M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0122126. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 4364699. PMID 25785609.

Bibliography Edit

  • Underwood, Emily (2020) "Small Wonders: The Plight and Promise of California's Native Bees". California Native Plant Society. 2021-06-25. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  • "Landmark Report: Hundreds of Native Bee Species Sliding Toward Extinction". www.biologicaldiversity.org. Retrieved 2022-05-29.
  • Russo, Laura; de Keyzer, Charlotte W; Harmon-Threatt, Alexandra N; LeCroy, Kathryn A; MacIvor, James Scott (2021-08-01). "The managed-to-invasive species continuum in social and solitary bees and impacts on native bee conservation". Current Opinion in Insect Science. Special Section on Pollinator decline: human and policy dimensions * Social insects. 46: 43–49. doi:10.1016/j.cois.2021.01.001. ISSN 2214-5745.
  • MacIvor, J. Scott; Packer, Laurence (2015-03-18). "'Bee Hotels' as Tools for Native Pollinator Conservation: A Premature Verdict?". PLoS One. 10 (3): e0122126. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0122126. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 4364699. PMID 25785609.
  • Geslin, Benoît; Gachet, Sophie; Deschamps-Cottin, Magali; Flacher, Floriane; Ignace, Benjamin; Knoploch, Corentin; Meineri, Éric; Robles, Christine; Ropars, Lise; Schurr, Lucie; Le Féon, Violette (2020-05-01). "Bee hotels host a high abundance of exotic bees in an urban context". Acta Oecologica. 105: 103556. doi:10.1016/j.actao.2020.103556. ISSN 1146-609X.
  • Geslin, Benoit; Ropars, Lise; Zakardjian, Marie; Flacher, Floriane (2022-01-26). "The misplaced management of bees". doi:10.22541/au.164319695.57033003/v1.

Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  • "Royal Entomological Society".
  • "Build a Bug Palace".

insect, hotel, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2022,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Insect hotel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message An insect hotel also known as a bug hotel or insect house is a manmade structure created to provide shelter for insects They can come in a variety of shapes and sizes depending on the specific purpose or specific insect it is catered to Most consist of several different sections that provide insects with nesting facilities particularly during winter offering shelter or refuge for many types of insects Their purposes include hosting pollinators Insect house in Parkend the Forest of Dean UK Contents 1 Purpose 2 Different hotels for different insects 2 1 Solitary bees and wasps 2 2 Butterflies 2 3 Parasitic insects 3 Environmental impacts 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksPurpose EditMany insect hotels are used as nest sites by insects including solitary bees and solitary wasps These insects drag prey to the nest where an egg is deposited Other insects hotels are specifically designed to allow the insects to hibernate notable examples include ladybirds ladybugs and arguably butterflies Insect hotels are popular amongst gardeners and fruit and vegetable growers due to their role encouraging insect pollination Some elaborately designed insect hotels may also be attractions in their own right and increasingly can be found in pub gardens and various tourist locations The introduction of insect hotels into a habitat provides valuable housing for beneficial insects Impacts can be seen in the form of better soil quality increased pollination elevated ecosystem diversity and reductions in the populations of detrimental insects citation needed Different hotels for different insects EditThis section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Ladybird hotel nbsp Bee hotel in Grimbergen Belgium nbsp Bee hotel and Insect hotel in La CasaRoja Farm Asturias Spain Good materials to build insect hotels with can include using dry stone walls or old tiles Drilled holes in the hotel materials also encourage insects to leave larvae to gestate Therefore different materials such as stones and woods are recommended for a wide range and diversity of insect life Logs and bark and bound reeds and bamboo are also often used The various components or sizes of holes to use as entry of an insect hotel attract different species Ready made insect hotels are also found at garden centers and particularly ecological and educational conservational centers and organisations Solitary bees and wasps Edit Main article Bee hotel Solitary bees and solitary wasps do not live within a hive with a queen Various species of solitary bees have different needs The vast majority of these nest in tunnels dug in bare soil but carpenter mason and leaf cutter bees nest in a tube Only the latter two types nest in ready made tubes in a bee hotel They have species specific preferences for tube diameter 2 10 mm and length about 10 cm A fertilized female makes a series of cells in a tube one egg per cell provisioned with pollen and sealed with mud or leaf cuttings respectively These bees spend most of their life in a cell as larva then cocoon over winter They emerge in spring timed to pollinate fruit and almond trees Males live very briefly as adults just long enough to mate with females who live just long enough to complete nesting A common type of bee hotel is created from a wooden log portion of a cut tree trunk or a stone block in which holes are drilled of different sizes e g 2 4 6 and 8 mm with the openings a few centimeters apart The holes are slightly tilted upwards from the opening so rainwater can drain out and are drilled about 10 cm into the material while keeping the end solid The entrances to these burrows must be smooth enough so that the delicate bodies of the insects are not damaged with the exterior of wooden bee hotels being frequently sanded The best location for a bee hotel is a warm and sheltered place such as a southern facing in the northern hemisphere wall or hedge The first insects are already active towards the end of winter and would be actively seeking for such a place to settle Other species like to furnish their nests with clay stone and sand or in between bricks A bee hotel should be in place for only one season replaced with fresh material in spring This is because some solitary wasps lay eggs in the egg larva or coccoon of tube nesting bees The cells may also contain fly maggots or pollen mites that killed the bee larva Clean tubes for the nesting bees in spring will also remove parasitoid larva failed bee larva and other detritus Many fans of these bees now put out blocks of wood with tubes drilled and cut so that the layers can be separated to view and remove tube contents during the winter Others prefer cardboard tubes each lined with a replaceable paper tube or designed to be torn open In all three cases healthy cocoons are removed to an emergence box kept cool over winter and put out as spring buds break Parasitoids are destroyed A simple bundle of bamboo or reeds tied or put in an old tin can and hung in a warm place may be suitable for some solitary bees The bamboo must be cut in a specific way to allow entry for the insects Often people may add stems of elderberry rose or blackberry shoots whose marrow can serve as a food source as well Butterflies Edit Butterflies that hibernate prefer sheltered places such as crevices in houses and sheds or enclosed spaces such as those in bundles of leaves Some insect hotels incorporate special butterfly enclosures with vertical slits that take into account the animals sensitive wings but the suitability of these enclosures for butterflies is disputed 1 2 Parasitic insects Edit By using an insect hotel parasitic insects are also attracted to make use of the facilities Cuckoo bees and wasps will lay their eggs within the nests of others in order to provide them with readily available food upon hatching without the parent insect having to provide for them Hotels also attract predatory insects which help control unwanted bugs For example earwigs are good to have present in and near fruit trees as they eat the plant lice that may settle on the tree and disturb fruit growth A terracotta flower pot hung upside down filled with bundles of straw or wood wool is an ideal house for earwigs Ladybirds are easy to cater for by placing many twigs within an open wooden box on its side to provide many small cavities Ladybirds prefer to hibernate in larger groups so this will encourage many to settle in one specific place Isopods have their usefulness as scavengers in the garden These animals like large gaps between stacked bricks and roof tiles to shelter from rain and to hide from predators Environmental impacts EditInsect hotels are generally thought to be a positive force in restoring or maintaining wild pollinator populations especially native bees many of which are endangered due to various factors such as competition with introduced bees like the western honey bee 3 Insect hotels are especially thought to be a valuable resource for insects that have had their primary natural habitat destroyed An example is Anthidium palliventre which were common in the sand dunes of the San Francisco area the species has struggled as the dunes have mostly been paved over for urban development 4 Such insects are often forced to find alternative housing such as in city parks typically with less success Over half of North America s native wild bees face similar difficulties and the actual number is possibly greater due to insufficient data on certain species 5 Bee hotels are sometimes constructed whether by private actors such as well meaning homeowners and gardeners or by government led conservation projects in attempts to remedy this issue and provide habitat to stabilize struggling native bee populations 6 A few recent studies suggest the possibility however that bee hotels in particular might do more harm than good in certain situations In a 2020 study urban bee hotels in the city of Marseille France were found to be primarily inhabited by an exotic bee species M structuralis whose presence correlated with lower native bee numbers in the area 7 A separate study in 2015 reported that bee hotels might be habitats for introduced bees and native bee natural enemies such as predatory and parasitic wasps rather than habitats for endangered native bees as well as potentially being foci of insect diseases and further putting native bees at risk 8 Special attention must be given to the details of insect hotels such as the diameter of the holes as this is a key factor in which insects are attracted to the hotel a variation in diameter of just 1 mm can make the difference between providing habitat for native bees with more specialized habitat needs or the more generalist adaptable introduced bees they compete with An alternative solution entirely might be more beneficial for conservation however as most wild solitary bees tend to nest underground and are not usually attracted to bee hotels 6 Gallery Edit nbsp Insect house in Pontgibaud Puy de Dome France nbsp Insect hotel in the botanical garden of Wuppertal Germany nbsp Insect hotel in the botanical garden of Heidelberg Germany nbsp Insect hotel near Kelheim Germany nbsp Insect hotel made from wooden pallets West Grinstead railway station West Sussex United Kingdom nbsp Insect hotel in the Czech Republic nbsp Insect hotel in the Czech RepublicSee also EditBeetle bank Dead hedge Hibernaculum zoology Insectary plant Nest box Roach MotelReferences Edit Johnson Terry W Out My Backdoor Do Butterfly Boxes Work Out My Backdoor GA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES Retrieved 17 December 2018 Hoskins Rachel 12 July 2019 How to make a butterfly house a step by step guide Woodland Trust Retrieved 17 September 2019 Russo Laura de Keyzer Charlotte W Harmon Threatt Alexandra N LeCroy Kathryn A MacIvor James Scott August 2021 The managed to invasive species continuum in social and solitary bees and impacts on native bee conservation Current Opinion in Insect Science 46 43 49 doi 10 1016 j cois 2021 01 001 PMID 33540109 S2CID 231818342 Small Wonders The Plight and Promise of California s Native Bees California Native Plant Society 25 June 2021 Retrieved 29 May 2022 Landmark Report Hundreds of Native Bee Species Sliding Toward Extinction www biologicaldiversity org Retrieved 29 May 2022 a b Geslin Benoit Ropers Lise Zakardjian Marie Flacher Floriane 26 January 2022 The misplaced management of bees doi 10 22541 au 164319695 57033003 v1 S2CID 246303072 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Geslin Benoit Gachet Sophie Deschamps Cottin Magali Flacher Floriane Ignace Benjamin Knoploch Corentin Meineri Eric Robles Christine Ropars Lise Schurr Lucie Le Feon Violette May 2020 Bee hotels host a high abundance of exotic bees in an urban context Acta Oecologica 105 103556 Bibcode 2020AcO 10503556G doi 10 1016 j actao 2020 103556 S2CID 218955482 MacIvor J Scott Packer Laurence 18 March 2015 Nascimento Fabio S ed Bee Hotels as Tools for Native Pollinator Conservation A Premature Verdict PLOS ONE 10 3 e0122126 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1022126M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0122126 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4364699 PMID 25785609 Bibliography EditUnderwood Emily 2020 Small Wonders The Plight and Promise of California s Native Bees California Native Plant Society 2021 06 25 Retrieved 2022 05 29 Landmark Report Hundreds of Native Bee Species Sliding Toward Extinction www biologicaldiversity org Retrieved 2022 05 29 Russo Laura de Keyzer Charlotte W Harmon Threatt Alexandra N LeCroy Kathryn A MacIvor James Scott 2021 08 01 The managed to invasive species continuum in social and solitary bees and impacts on native bee conservation Current Opinion in Insect Science Special Section on Pollinator decline human and policy dimensions Social insects 46 43 49 doi 10 1016 j cois 2021 01 001 ISSN 2214 5745 MacIvor J Scott Packer Laurence 2015 03 18 Bee Hotels as Tools for Native Pollinator Conservation A Premature Verdict PLoS One 10 3 e0122126 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0122126 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4364699 PMID 25785609 Geslin Benoit Gachet Sophie Deschamps Cottin Magali Flacher Floriane Ignace Benjamin Knoploch Corentin Meineri Eric Robles Christine Ropars Lise Schurr Lucie Le Feon Violette 2020 05 01 Bee hotels host a high abundance of exotic bees in an urban context Acta Oecologica 105 103556 doi 10 1016 j actao 2020 103556 ISSN 1146 609X Geslin Benoit Ropars Lise Zakardjian Marie Flacher Floriane 2022 01 26 The misplaced management of bees doi 10 22541 au 164319695 57033003 v1 Further reading EditWedmore E B 1979 A manual of beekeeping ISBN 0 905652 01 0 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Insect hotels Royal Entomological Society Build a Bug Palace Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Insect hotel amp oldid 1175637535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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