Maximizing honey bee pollination in pickling cucumbers

Understanding honey bee behavior in your fields and how best to place and move rented hives will result in better pollination.

Honey bee on cucumber
Figure 1. Honey bee worker visiting a female cucumber flower.

Seeded pickling cucumbers require pollination to set fruit. A female flower needs eight to 12 pollinator visits in a single day in order to produce marketable fruit. Because individual cucumber flowers are open only for a single day, the more bees you have in the field, the greater the chance of successful fruit set. Cucumber flowers are not very attractive to native bees, so honey bees are the most important pollinator in commercial pickling cucumber fields, accounting for 98% of bee visits to cucumber flowers.

Honey bees visit flowers for two reasons: pollen for protein and nectar for carbohydrates. They use different flowers for different resources. Cucumber flowers are mainly used for nectar. As the bees visit the flowers collecting nectar, they transfer pollen from flower to flower providing pollination. Only the oldest bees forage, so a colony has to be large and healthy to have enough workers to perform pollination.

Foragers will travel miles to find pollen, nectar and water. Every morning they leave the hive, returning to the same hive at the end of the day. Honey bee workers scout to learn the layout of the surrounding landscape and will quickly find new areas of mass flowering crops such as cucumbers. When they find a large patch of food, they will communicate its location to other foragers. They remember these locations and return to a site day after day as long as it is producing food. This efficient system saves them time; as long as they are in the same location, they can efficiently visit large patches of food without spending time scouting and orienting.

honey bee hives on wagon
Figure 2. Honey bee hives mounted on a wagon for transport.

Placing honey bee hives

During cucumber pollination, honey bee hives are either left along a field edge for the summer or kept on wagons and moved between smaller plantings (Figure 2). Moving is stressful for bees and can affect their ability pollinate your crop, especially if done during the day. If hives are moved when the foragers are out, they will not find the new colony location. When hives are moved short distances and remain in the original flight range, foragers may use old landmarks and return to the initial (now hiveless) location. Losing foragers is not good. Since only certain bees in the hive forage (and provide pollination while foraging), moving hives may mean that you lose all the bees you need to pollinate your cucumbers!

MSU researchers investigated the effects of moving colonies on bee health and crop yield

Impact on honey bee colonies

We compared growth of stationary honey bee colonies to colonies on wagons on multiple cucumber fields in eastern Michigan. All the colonies grew throughout the season (Figure 3), but growth was greater in stationary colonies. After eight weeks, stationary colonies grew by 43.2% while colonies in wagons grew only 19.4%. This difference in relative colony growth is substantial. Compared to moved colonies, the stationary colonies contained 20% more bees, almost the equivalent of an additional hive. Smaller colonies with fewer workers not only mean fewer bees available to visit cucumber flowers, but it also it means more work and expense for your beekeepers, which may lead to higher rental prices.

Chart
Figure 3. Growth of honey bee colonies over the summer, as measured by the number of frames per hive covered in worker bees.

Impact on cucumber yield

During 2017 and 2018, we measured cucumber yield in 21 fields across central and eastern Michigan: 14 fields were pollinated exclusively by stationary hives and seven fields were pollinated exclusively by hives on wagons. Yield was assessed by collecting 20 plants selected randomly from across the whole field two days before harvest. All cucumbers were stripped from plants and graded, according to United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) standards. Fields pollinated by stationary colonies had higher set rates and a greater number of high-quality sizes (average of 47.6 grade one to four cucumbers per 20 plants, with an average of 29.1 grade two to three cucumbers) (Figure 4). Fields pollinated by colonies on wagons had a lower set rate and fewer high-quality sizes (41.7 grade one to four cucumbers and 25.7 grade two to three cucumbers). Overall, fields using stationary colonies had 14% more grade one to four cucumbers per plant and 13% more grade two to three cucumbers per plant.

Chart
Figure 4. Cucumber yields in fields with hives that are stationary compared to hives that were moved on wagons.

Summary

We found that moving hives on wagons reduced the growth of honey bee colonies and slightly reduced cucumber yield. Because honey bee workers can fly several miles to forage, where cucumber plantings are close together (less than 1 mile from hives) we recommend leaving hives in a single location throughout summer. Colonies will grow to a greater size, contain more worker bees and these bees will visit more flowers. If plantings are too far apart, then colonies should be moved at night time to avoid the loss of foraging workers.

Other resources

This material is based upon work supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, under Agreement No. 2017-700006-27175. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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