NEWS Wallowa.com Wednesday, April 17, 2019 B3 Keeping wild bees and wild grasslands healthy Ellen Morris Bishop Wallowa County Chieftain Sandy DeBano waded through Zumwalt Prairie’s tall, dry bunchgrass and swept her long, white net deftly through late July’s fading fl owers. “Got ‘em” she said. The net held trea- sures: two bumble bees, a sweat bee and multiple small fl ies — all late-season pollinators. The catch would help defi ne how fi re and grazing practices may ben- efi t some and imperil other wild pollinators in grass- land ecosystems on The Nature Conservancy’s Zum- walt Prairie Preserve. “The outcome will help TNC to manage grazing as well as fi re and invasive plants, so that pollinators thrive and grasslands fl ourish,” said TNC Zumwalt Prairie Proj- ect Manager Jeff Fields. Dr. DeBano, an Ore- gon State University Asso- ciate Professor of Wild- life Ecology, specializes in wild pollinators. More spe- cifi cally, she studies how human management affects bees, butterfl ies, beetles and other tiny invertebrates, and the ecosystem services they provide. Most of us know that honeybees — the imported European honeybee that pollinates many commercial crops is in trouble. Disease and the mysterious colony collapse disorder continue to take their toll. But many native bee species are also strug- gling. These wild pollina- tors ensure our backyard garden’s fecundity, and the overall health and produc- tivity of grassland ecosys- tems for wildlife, people and livestock. The Nature Conservancy is collaborating with Ore- gon State University at its Zumwalt Prairie Preserve to study how wild bees respond to fi re, invasive plants and grazing. “The study’s overall goal is to increase our understanding of how these factors affect native bees so that we don’t accidentally hurt bees while we are managing the prairie for the other things we care about,” Fields said. The three-year-study on TNC’s preserve kicked off in the spring of 2018, and will continue through 2020. Its $660,000 budget is sup- ported by the Foundation for Food and Agriculture’s Pollinator Health Fund, with additional contribu- tions from The Nature Con- servancy, and Oregon State University. It’s part of the continuing research on the Zumwalt Prairie Preserve. “Not all the results from the summer of 2018 are tab- ulated yet,” DeBano said. But previous work at the Zumwalt provides a glimpse of what they’ll fi nd. “Bumble bees are one of the most abundant types of bee pollinator,” said Heidi Schmalz, TNC Zumwalt Prairie biologist. “They comprise about 30% of all the bee species out here. They are really important on the Zumwalt.” For example, there are only two known pollina- tors of the rare, threatened Spalding’s Catchfl y. Both are bumble bees — the yel- low bumble bee and the white-shouldered bumble bee, according to a 2012 study by DeBano and TNC ecologist Rob Taylor. While other insects may help polli- nate the Spalding Catchfl y’s complex fl owers, only these THE ONE STOP SHOP FOR YOUR HVAC... Bumblebees comprise about 30% of pollinators on the Zumwalt Prairie Preserve. They are semi-solitary bees that prefer cooler, aspen-rich sites and unglazed areas according to research by Dr. Sandy DeBano and others. Photos by Ellen M Bishop Sandy DeBano inspects her net for pollinating insects. two long-tongued bumble bees were observed gather- ing pollen from the deeply indented blossoms. Across North America, bumble bee numbers are decreasing, according to the Xerces Society, a sci- ence-based nonprofi t ded- icated to pollinator and invertebrate conservation. Some bumble bee species have experienced rapid and dramatic declines. Accord- ing to Xerces Society data, about 28% of all North American bumble bees are facing some degree of extinction risk. One spe- cies, the western bumble bee was the most abundant bumble bee in Oregon until the 1990s when an imported viral disease decimated their populations. They vanished from the Willamette Valley, and were considered virtu- ally extinct across Oregon. But there’s good news for these bumble bees on Zumwalt. “We found our fi rst western bumble bee in 2006 when we fi rst started surveying pollinators on the Zumwalt,” DeBano said. “Since then, we’ve contin- ued to fi nd them. We seem to have a pretty good popu- lation out there.” One likely reason west- ern bumble bees survived here,” DeBano said, is that the disease that decimated the bumble bees on the west side never made it over the Cascades. “Our work at the Zumwalt was the fi rst to show there are fairly healthy populations of these bees east of the Cascades,” she said. Still, the western bum- ble bee is fairly rare. “It’s about 1 to 2% of all the bum- ble bees out here on Zum- walt. Not super common. But it could be an import- ant pollinator for a certain plant species.” A study of pollen that the western bum- ble bees carry on their legs will help DeBano and her students determine which plants these rare bumble bees frequent. Bumble bees are only one of many types of pollinators on Zumwalt. Sweat bees — so named because they seem to be attracted to the mois- ture of human sweat — are relatively small bees nearly equal in importance to their larger cousins. Late in the year, they are often more abundant. Sweat bees may PARTS S & SERVICES MAINTENANCE Not all pollinators are bees. This hover fl y does its fair share of pollinating fl owers on Zumwalt Prairie. ‘BUMBLE BEES ARE ONE OF THE MOST ABUNDANT TYPES OF BEE POLLINATOR.’ Heidi Schmalz, TNC Zumwalt Prairie biologist have striped abdomens, or be greenish or bluish with an attractive metallic sheen. “They are beautiful bees,” DeBano said. “They live in solitary nests in bare, com- pacted ground in contrast to bumble bees who nest in abandoned rodent burrows and other cavities, or at the April 21st 2019 Join Us to Celebrate Easter! The Big Brown Church Easter Service 11:00am Music with Gail Swart & Sue Wagner Pastor Archie Hook Enterprise Community Congregational Church All are welcome here 301 NE First St., Enterprise bigbrownchurch.org ENTERPRISE CHRISTIAN CHURCH 85035 Joseph Hwy, Enterprise • 541-426-3449 www.enterprisechristianchurch.org Thursday Maunday Thursday Communion 7:00pm Friday Community Good Friday Service 7:00pm Sunday Sunrise Service at 6:30am Easter Worship Service at 9:00am Easter Celebration Joseph Baptist Church Sunday, April 21st, 9:30 am Brunch in Hall 10:30 am Celebration Services! Energy Community Service. Thursday 5:30pm Easter Brunch at 9:30am Easter Service Begins at 11am Hwy 82 Lostine • Info: 541-398-0547 Blog:dancingfaith.blogspot.com Grace Lutheran Church Easter Services 9:00 am with Holy Communion Breakfast to follow 409 West Main •Enterprise Christ Covenant Church Good Friday Services 5:30pm Easter Sunrise Service 8:00 am at Evans Park Easter Sunday Breakfast 9:00 am Sunday Worship 11:00 am Fellowship Feast Sunday 4:00pm Eagle Cap Chalet’s Pastor Terry Tollefson Email: pastorterrancetollefson@hotmail.com Church Office: 541-263-0505 723 College Street, Lostine OR 72 Easter Sunday April 21st Easter Breakfast at 8:00 Celebration Services at 10:00 "Christ Raised to Life!" 541-432-3102 Ed Staub & Sons Maunday Thursday Jim Higgins, Pastor Coffee cake, rolls, muffins from 8:00-9:00 a.m. josephumc.org 201 East Hwy 82 Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-0320 Lostine Presbyterian Church (Nursery provided) Joseph United Methodist Church INSTALLATION base of grass tussocks — not compacted soils.” A 2012 study by DeBano and others found that areas with higher grazing inten- sity saw declines in bumble bees and increases in sweat bees. The probable reasons: bumble bees avoided areas where grazing had removed many of the fl owers they needed for pollen. But the sweat bees were attracted to the grazed areas because for them, the more compacted and exposed soils provided prime nesting habitat. ‘”In the current study, we’ll be looking at these questions in more detail,” DeBano said. Could sweat bees, which increase in grazed areas, do the pollinating work of bum- ble bees that avoid them? “Sweat bees generally visit fl owers that have different shapes and sizes than the fl owers visited by bumble bees. We don’t know that sweat bees could step in to fi ll their roles,” DeBano said. There’s much still to learn about the relations between wild pollinators, grazing, fi re and invasive plants. How do the fl ower- ing species differ between burned and unburned areas? What effect does this have on both pollinators and grazing animals including deer, elk, and cattle? Does fi re directly effect pollina- tors? Do invasive plants support or diminish spe- cifi c pollinators? And how do pollinators, fi re, invasive plants, and grazing all inter- act here? These and other ques- tions will be addressed during the upcoming, sec- ond year of the study. “Wild pollinators are important,” Fields said. “Livestock grazing is also an important and a very prevalent use of this land- scape. If we are going to have both thrive here on the Zumwalt, we need to under- stand all this better.” 301 S. Lake St. Joseph • Cherie Dearth, Pastor Happy Easter