Wildlife & Nature

Warwick Women Push Pollinator Pathways to Connect Native Species

These patches of green also bond humans with nature

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Native plants liven up a landscape. (Frank Carini/ecoRI News)

WARWICK, R.I. — Neck surgery in 2005 put Amy Ottilige’s life on hold. She was “bored,” until she noticed a monarch butterfly fluttering outside her window. The simple observation changed her life. Instead of just briefly stopping to smell the flowers, she came to appreciate the bugs’ life on them.

Once recovered and after some self-education, Ottilige embraced the importance of native plants and the pollinators they support. Since 2014, when she began “raising” butterflies, some 1,500 of the nectar-feeding insects have completed their metamorphosis in her yard, including 161 monarchs last year and 28 swallowtails this year.

“I just started, and then I ended up having a whole width of my house as a pollinator garden,” Ottilige said. “I’ve raised all types of butterflies, but monarchs are my favorite.”

The Warwick Wildlife and Conservation Commission member continues to educate herself about pollinators and their needs, recently completing her pollinator steward certification. She is a member of the Monarch Watch program, and she has made and distributed several pamphlets — “Pollinators & How We Can Help,” “What is Pollination?,” and “Your Pollinator Garden” — to educate the public about the importance of pollinators.

Anne Holst, who has been chair of the Wildlife and Conservation Commission for the past 14 years, noted it’s important to plant native flowers in your yard, or at least in a few pots.

“When surrounded by grassy lawns, pollinators move or die, but the presence of native plants sustains them,” Holst said. “We need bee lawns. People need to realize that if you don’t have pollinators, you’re not going to have food.”

ecoRI News recently spoke with both women on the porch of the Clouds Hill Victorian House Museum about the importance of pollinators and their disturbing decline. (Holst is the fourth-generation owner of the estate.)

Both women, along with the rest of the seven-member Wildlife and Conservation Commission, are sponsoring a Pollinator Expo on Saturday, Sept. 28, from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at Holst’s Post Road estate. The inaugural Expo was held last year at the same location and attracted about 100 people.

The idea behind the event — and pollinator lectures at the Warwick Public Library — is to get residents, local or otherwise, to embrace the concept of creating pollinator pathways. The Wildlife and Conservation Commission was inspired by the mission of Pollinator Pathway, a nationwide nonprofit based in Wilton, Conn., that is working with partners to establish pollinator-friendly habitat for bees, butterflies, other pollinating insects, hummingbirds, and wildlife along a series of continuous corridors.

“People can learn the basics of working with their own gardens and yards to provide healthy environments for bees, butterflies, and birds, all creatures we need to ensure flowers, fruits, and vegetables can grow abundantly,” Holst said. “Bees are very limited in how far from the hive they can go unless there is a continuous path of plants that they can get pollen and nectar from.”

Most native bees have a range of no more than half a mile, so the Pollinator Pathway’s goal is to connect properties that are no farther apart than that.

Pollinator pathways can come in all shapes and sizes, from gardens to pots. (Frank Carini/ecoRI News)

The Wildlife and Conservation Commission is trying to establish pollinator pathways at Toll Gate High School, Brayton Cemetery on Post Road in Apponaug, City Park in Buttonwoods, and in any residential yard interested in joining the effort.

Ottilige noted that pollinator pathways — in backyards, on municipal property, or in a business park — don’t need to be intense, time-consuming, or expensive. She said they can be as small as a window box with a few native perennials.

“Do what you feel you can afford and handle. You can start with a simple, small window container,” Ottilige said. “If you have a large yard, you can have half as a meadow. It’s up to you how much you want to put into it, and it’s up to you to be able to sit back and have a cup of tea and watch all these beautiful things fly around.”

The women recommended not mowing your lawn every week and allow it to grow taller for two or three weeks before cutting; leaving some patches of your yard vegetation-free to provide habitat for native ground-nesting bees; and creating a mowing schedule around the life cycles of native plants, because wildflowers aren’t only beautiful in bloom, but they also provide important ecological services.

“We’re trying to educate people about the fact that the most unhealthy thing is what we call the monoculture lawn and everything that goes on it,” Holst said. “You’re just depriving pollinators of food.”

Pollinators also come in all shapes and sizes. (Frank Carini/ecoRI News)

Pollination enables native plants in yards, parks, farms, orchards, and forests to reproduce. While imported European honeybees are the pollinators most often celebrated, there are some 4,000 bee species native to the United States, plus flies, moths, butterflies, and other insects, that also provide this service for free.

Pollinator populations, however, are in sharp decline, largely because of the overuse of pesticides, the relentless development of habitat, and the human-caused climate crisis. Monarch butterflies have declined by about 90% in the past few decades, according to the National Wildlife Federation. A 2017 study found a 75% decline in all flying insects in the past 27 years.

Of the 550 gigatons of biomass on the planet, animals make up about 2 gigatons, with insects comprising half of that. While humans weigh in at just 0.06 gigatons, our reckless land use, our propensity to reproduce — humans are on track to hit nearly 11 billion by 2100, according to the Population Media Center — and our disregard for the natural world are choking biodiversity.

A 2017 study called the massive loss of wildlife a “biological annihilation.” A 2018 study noted that humans represent just 0.01% of all life on the planet but have destroyed 83% of wild mammals. A 2023 study found that entire genera — the plural of genus — are vanishing in what was called a “mutilation of the tree of life.”

“In the long term, we’re putting a big dent in the evolution of life on the planet,” according to the researchers who authored last year’s study. “But also, in this century, what we’re doing to the tree of life will cause a lot of suffering for humanity.”

It should come as no surprise then that our massive footprint is stomping out insect life. According to a 2019 study, about half of the world’s insects are speeding down a path toward extinction that threatens the collapse of ecosystems. Insects are a food source for amphibians, birds, fish, reptiles, and some humans.

They are also pollinators, and humans need them.

Three-fourths of the world’s flowering plants and about 35% of the world’s food crops depend on animal pollinators to reproduce. Some scientists have estimated that one out of every three bites of food we eat exists because of animal pollinators such as bees, beetles, butterflies, moths, and other insects, plus birds and bats.

More than 40% of insect species are declining and a third are endangered. Their rate of insect extinction is eight times faster than that of mammals, birds, and reptiles. Total bug mass is decreasing by 2.5% annually, according to research.

“We’re not asking them to spend beaucoup money,” said Ottilige of encouraging people to help pollinators. “It’s whatever you feel like you want to do and try.”

Note: The Sept. 28 Pollinator Expo will be held rain or shine. The free event will feature educational materials and presentations, talks, exhibits, information resources, a plant walk, seed exchange, and a photo contest designed to inspire community interest in a Pollinator Pathway project citywide.

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  1. I would like to add that leaving native plants in sidewalk strips and vacant lots is also beneficial to pollinators and birds. St. John’s Wort, native asters, evening primrose, golden rod, are some of the plants I see thriving in city environments.

  2. We’re taught as gardeners to remove the “weeds” but I’ve come to leave and embrace many of the native wildflowers especially the flea bane and evening primrose. The evening primrose can grow quite tall and I let it mature between the lawn and street where in winter they act as natural plow markers- the snow plows no longer dig up my yard and they look better than the man made neon ones- have also seen goldfinch on them.

  3. I can personally list some pollinators species I have photographed this summer in my yard:

    Allograpta Obliqua, American Idia, Zubulon Skipper, Anania Funebris, Great Golden Sanddigger, Large Yellow Underwing, Toxomerus Marginatus, Eristalis Arbustorum, Halictus Ligatus, Metallic Green Bee, Eristalis Dimidiata, Pearl Cresent, Red-banded Hairstreak, Polites Peckius, Ocyptamus Fuscipennis, etc..

    Meanwhile, sine 2017 I have documented for https://beecology.wpi.edu/website/learn#section1, the native bumble bees I spot. Note that they have different glossas thus, it is advisable to plant different native plants in the same color scheme as they cross pollinate similar colored flowers. But more importantly they need nesting habitat. And AUTUMN is upon us!!!

    https://xerces.org/blog/moving-beyond-flowers-natural-nesting-habitat-for-bees-and-other-insects

    https://xerces.org/publications/fact-sheets/nesting-overwintering-habitat |

    Bee Habitat Loss • Friends of the Earth (foe.org)/ factors-contributing-to-bee-decline-PR.pdf (usu.edu)

    Pollinator Habitat – The Bee Conservancy , notes “Particularly vulnerable are 75% of the world’s 20,000+ bee species, who live a solitary (versus colony) lifestyle. With a foraging range of 300 meters or less, these bees can’t survive and reproduce if food and shelter is not nearby.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TfrpEBmSG0E Must watch!!! Very informative!!!

    Pollinators in the woods? The place of wild bees in a changing forested landscape

    RIDEM:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kT_JILm3cw Wild Gardening: Spring

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aVtxD9h5u7I Wild Gardening: Fall

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