Building a prairie and watching for bees

Entomology professor Alexandra Harmon-Threatt stands in a prairie with a clipboard in her hands. She is wearing a hat, a long-sleeved shirt and a mask. In the background, undergraduate student Sabine Miller carries a bucket of sandbags used to weigh down the tent traps.

Entomology professor Alexandra Harmon-Threatt and undergraduate student Sabine Miller prepare for an evening of work in a prairie the professor created to study ground-nesting bees.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

Research technician Joshua Villazana checks one of the traps for bees.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, Ill. – It's early evening as I follow the researchers to their work site on the Phillips Tract, just east of Urbana. When we get there, I immediately notice two things: We are standing in a vast grid of prairie plots with neatly mowed paths between them, and there are tents – dozens of dollhouse-sized tents.

The vegetation is only about thigh-high – the researchers planted the site in 2018 – but it's obviously a prairie. I see bee balm, gray-headed coneflower, partridge pea and other common prairie plants. The tents are placed in tidy rows inside some of the plots.

Undergraduate student Sabine Miller moves tents for the team.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

The University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign owns this land and is using it as an outdoor laboratory where researchers and students can address agricultural or ecological questions. Entomology professor Alexandra Harmon-Threatt has taken advantage of the opportunity. She is the driving force behind this carefully planned grid.

Two years ago, Harmon-Threatt built this outdoor laboratory by planting more than 80 prairie species here, most of them flowering plants. Her mission is to attract wild ground-nesting bees. She is here to see which bees are showing up and how they're doing. But that's not all she's after.

Harmon-Threatt found this specimen in one of the traps. This bee belongs to the genus Augochlorella.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

Harmon-Threatt and her team fan out into the site and get to work. There's much to do before the sun goes down.

Entomology lab manager Morgan Mackert checks a trap for bees.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

"These are 20-by-20-meter plots, and there are 96 of them," she says as we walk down one of the rows. "This is a large-scale experiment to see if we can manipulate the soil to benefit bees. Specifically, we want to see if we can increase nesting and decrease the presence of pesticides."

Half of her 96 plots were treated with agriculturally relevant levels of neonicotinoid pesticides. Working with natural resources and environmental sciences professor Anthony Yannarell, she also is manipulating plant diversity, carbon content and microbial composition of the soil to see how these factors affect pesticide breakdown and, ultimately, bee health.

The team recovered a ground-nesting bee for later identification.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

"Neonicotinoids are really prevalent anywhere corn and soy are planted," Harmon-Threatt says. "This gives us an opportunity to see if we can alter their breakdown in the soil."

The tents capture the ground-nesting bees when they emerge from their subterranean homes in daylight. Each tent funnels the bees into a chamber above a vat of soapy water. Any bees eventually fall into the water, making them easier to collect. Harmon-Threatt takes the insects back to the lab for identification, genomic studies and other tests.

So far, the team isn't finding much. This is their second deployment of the tents this season, and they've found only 12 ground-nesting bees so far, out of 80 tents placed in two locales on different nights. This is probably because the prairie is still quite young and the bees are only just getting established.

"The bees we do find tend to be things in the family Halictidae," Harmon-Threatt says. "That includes things like Lasioglossum. That's the genus. And sometimes we get Augochlorella. Those last ones are bright green and really beautiful."

Sierra Raglin, a graduate research assistant in the laboratory of natural resources and environmental sciences professor Angela Kent, helps with data collection. In her own research, Raglin studies how corn domestication affects soil microbes and influences agricultural sustainability.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

The team also has found Andrena, or mining bees, which are in a different family, she said.

These insects are smaller than honey bees and have a different lifestyle. The ones that interest Harmon-Threatt burrow into the soil to make their nests. Most of them provision their young with a mass of pollen and nectar inside a waterproof cell.

Lora Cheng, a graduate student in natural resources and environmental sciences, helps out with the project. In her own research, she studies how far neonicotinoid pesticides travel from where they are applied. "My ultimate goal is to find a way to decrease the pesticide contamination in the soil," she says.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

Studies of wild bees often focus on how they contribute to pollination. There is evidence that these tiny insects play an important role in pollinating wild plants and even crops. But Harmon-Threatt wants to know more about the bees than what flowers they pollinate.

"For most species, we have very little data on their nesting habits," she tells me. "There are some indications that they like to nest in bare ground with a certain amount of moisture, but we really don't know why they choose some nesting locations over others."

Harmon-Threatt and her colleagues must finish their work before the sun sets.

Photo by Fred Zwicky

While studies are scarce and most focus on declines in honey bees, the evidence suggests that native bees also are suffering steep population declines, Harmon-Threatt says.

"If we want to bring the bees back, we have to figure out exactly what it is they need and what really hurts them," she says. Restoring prairies may not be enough, or the way the prairie is structured may make a big difference in how much it helps the bees.

"The nesting piece lets us know whether we're just making pretty landscapes or whether we're building the bees lasting homes," she says. "So that's why I do this. Because if we really want to conserve pollinators, we've got to make it last. And nesting is the key to that."

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