Column
Carpenter Bees and Spring reminders
By John Fulton
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[May 23, 2015]
Carpenter Bees - Carpenter bees
will be the unofficial “insect of the week.” What is usually a very
minor pest, has garnered half-a-dozen calls and office visits in the
last week or so. There are many species of carpenter bees, with the
most common in our area resembling a bumblebee. There are
differences of course, with the major one being the top of the
abdomen segment of the carpenter bee being bare and shiny.
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Like any bee or wasp, the males can’t sting. They do however try
to intimidate you. The females are rather tame, but do have the
ability to sting if you provoke them too much (such as trying to
catch them).
What sets the carpenter bee off from other bees we are more
familiar with is – well, just what its name implies. It works
wood. Wood isn’t a food source, but rather a place to lay eggs.
The bees chew a hole in wood, and this initial hole becomes a
tunnel with different chambers. This same area is used over a
period of years, and when it is outgrown, a new set of tunnels
is formed. The take-away is carpenter bees return to the same
area – if not the same set of tunnels. If you see bees drilling
wood, or a number of bees hovering around the eaves and soffit
areas of the house, you can be somewhat certain you have
carpenter bees.
Damage from a few bees is rather minimal, but remember the part
about expanding the same area year-after-year. Over a period of
time, there can be significant damage to certain boards. Another
habit is the preference to drill up, but that isn’t an absolute.
There is usually more damage on soffit and fascia than on
siding.
As for control, it gets a little difficult. Painting exposed
wood surfaces tends to be a deterrent, but if a hole existed
then the bees are used to the area. Use of dust formulations of
insecticides are the most effective. They also are more labor
intensive to use. Carbaryl (Sevin) dust is one of the more
common ones, and is best applied through a dust applicator
(looks like an old bicycle pump with a dust canister and plastic
tube attached). Puffing dust into the holes in spring when you
first notice the bees, again mid-summer, and a third time in
early fall is the recommended schedule.
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Larger areas can be treated with sprayed insecticides such as
permethrin, bifenthrin, or cyfluthrin on about the same
schedule. These sprays will help reduce populations, but won’t
be carried into the tunnels as effectively as dusts. Don’t plug
holes immediately after treatment either. The idea is to have
the bees carry the insecticide into the tunnels as they enter.
4-H Camp is battling these bees, and the Camp has resorted to
covering soffit and fascia with metal after a period of fighting
a losing battle.
Spring Reminders
If you haven’t already, pruning flowering shrubs after they
bloom is the best way to get that second year growth that most
flower on. This would include things such as forsythia and
lilacs.
Lawn work is in high gear. It’s hard to keep up with mowing
chores, but removing no more than one-third of the leaf blade at
a time will keep grass from building up to the point it needs to
be raked or collected. If you didn’t do the spring fertilizer
application, now would be a good time to use about 10 pounds of
10-10-10 or eight pounds of 12-12-12 per 1000 square feet. It is
also a good time for lawn weed applications, but watch wind
conditions to minimize drift to gardens, flowers, and other
unintended areas.
[By JOHN FULTON, COUNTY EXTENSION
DIRECTOR SERVING LOGAN, MENARD, AND SANGAMON COUNTIES] |