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Common eastern bumblebee
Common eastern bumblebee
Bombus impatiens
Bee
The most abundant native bumblebee across eastern North America and the workhorse pollinator for many native perennials. One of the few bumblebees that performs buzz pollination at scale — essential for blueberry, tomato, and other vibration-pollinated crops.
Plants in the catalog
Plants this species pollinates · 33
Garden tomato
Solanum lycopersicum
Specialist
Tomato flowers are buzz-pollinated — pollen is released by the wing-buzz vibration of Bombus and related native bees. Honeybees lack this behavior and cannot effectively pollinate tomato; commercial greenhouse tomato production specifically introduces bumblebee hives for this reason.
Highbush blueberry
Vaccinium corymbosum
Specialist
Buzz pollination by bumblebees is the canonical pollination mode for Vaccinium; honeybees lack the wing-buzz vibration that releases pollen from the urn-shaped flowers, so bumblebees are functionally specialist pollinators on commercial blueberry.
American red raspberry
Rubus idaeus
Documented
Annabelle hydrangea
Hydrangea arborescens
Documented
The showy ball-shaped 'Annabelle' florets are sterile, but the smaller fertile florets that surround them attract bees for pollination of the seed-producing flowers (which 'Annabelle' produces inconsistently due to its cultivar selection for showy sterile flowers).
Aromatic aster
Symphyotrichum oblongifolium
Documented
Black-eyed Susan
Rudbeckia fulgida
Documented
Blue false indigo
Baptisia australis
Documented
NC State documents bumblebees as primary pollinators; the pea-flower architecture requires bumblebee landing weight to open the keel and access the nectar reward.
Butterfly weed
Asclepias tuberosa
Documented
Canada goldenrod
Solidago canadensis
Documented
Canadian serviceberry
Amelanchier canadensis
Documented
Early-spring native bees emerging from winter are the primary pollinators; serviceberry is among the earliest spring nectar sources in eastern North America.
Common milkweed
Asclepias syriaca
Documented
Large bumblebees are among the few insects strong enough to work the pollinia-loaded flowers effectively.
Common sunflower
Helianthus annuus
Documented
Coral bells
Heuchera spp.
Documented
Cucumber
Cucumis sativus
Documented
NC State documents bee attraction; bumblebees + honeybees are the primary cucumber pollinators. Cucumber benefits less from squash-bee specialist pollination than Cucurbita pepo does (squash bees prefer their Cucurbita hosts).
Cutleaf coneflower
Rudbeckia laciniata
Documented
Dense blazing star
Liatris spicata
Documented
Foxglove beardtongue
Penstemon digitalis
Documented
Long-tongued bumblebees access the tubular corolla efficiently and serve as primary pollinators alongside the specialist Penstemon mason bee (Osmia distincta).
Mountain laurel
Kalmia latifolia
Documented
NC State documents bumblebees as primary pollinators via the spring-loaded anther-trigger mechanism. The flower's unique architecture co-evolved with native bumblebee-sized visitors — honeybees pollinate less efficiently because they're smaller than the trigger mechanism's target.
New York ironweed
Vernonia noveboracensis
Documented
Pinxter azalea
Rhododendron periclymenoides
Documented
Purple coneflower
Echinacea purpurea
Documented
Salal
Gaultheria shallon
Documented
Scarlet bee balm
Monarda didyma
Documented
Long-tongued bumblebees are among the few bees with proboscises long enough to reach the nectar in tubular Monarda flowers.
Smooth blue aster
Symphyotrichum laeve
Documented
Spotted Joe-Pye weed
Eutrochium maculatum
Documented
Summer squash / zucchini / pumpkin
Cucurbita pepo
Documented
Swamp milkweed
Asclepias incarnata
Documented
Swamp sunflower
Helianthus angustifolius
Documented
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Eutrochium purpureum
Documented
Threadleaf coreopsis
Coreopsis verticillata
Documented
Virginia bluebells
Mertensia virginica
Documented
NC State documents bumblebees + long-tongued bees as primary pollinators; the tubular bell corolla suits long-tongued species. Early-spring emergence aligns with bumblebee queen activity when few other native plants are blooming.
Wild bergamot
Monarda fistulosa
Documented
Bumblebees are primary pollinators of Monarda fistulosa; long-tongued bumblebees can reach the nectar at the base of the tubular flowers more efficiently than honeybees.
Winterberry
Ilex verticillata
Documented
Spring native bees pollinate the inconspicuous flowers on female plants; without bee pollination, the iconic red berries do not develop.
Nectar plants · 71
New England aster
Symphyotrichum novae-angliae
Specialist
Critical late-season nectar source for late-summer bumblebees building reserves before winter dormancy; aster pollen is what some Bombus queens carry into hibernation.
Allegheny blackberry
Rubus allegheniensis
Documented
American basswood
Tilia americana
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags special value to native bees; bumble bees work the fragrant pale-yellow June cymes for nectar.
American plum
Prunus americana
Documented
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center: special value to bumble bees — the early March bloom is an important pre-foliage nectar and pollen source.
Anise hyssop
Agastache foeniculum
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Agastache foeniculum as having special value to bumble bees; the long-blooming flower spikes are a heavily worked summer nectar source.
Apple
Malus domestica
Plausible
Bumble bees work the fragrant spring blossom for nectar and pollen and are effective apple pollinators alongside honey bees; the showy April flower is a spring forage source.
Arrowwood viburnum
Viburnum dentatum
Documented
Autumn-joy stonecrop
Hylotelephium 'Herbstfreude'
Documented
NC State Extension documents the flowers as a fall nectar source for bees; bumble bees are among the late-season visitors to the broad flattened flower heads.
Beach plum
Prunus maritima
Documented
Beach plum carries the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center "Special Value to Native Bees" flag; its early profuse white bloom is a nectar and pollen source for native bumble bees such as the common eastern bumble bee.
Bearberry (kinnikinnick)
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi
Documented
Black cherry
Prunus serotina
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags black cherry as having Special Value to Bumble Bees; the spring racemes are a nectar source for bumble bees such as the common eastern bumble bee.
Black chokeberry
Aronia melanocarpa
Documented
Spring hawthorn-like flowers attract bumblebees and other Rosaceae-visiting pollinators.
Black tupelo (black gum)
Nyssa sylvatica
Documented
Blackhaw viburnum
Viburnum prunifolium
Documented
Bloodroot
Sanguinaria canadensis
Documented
Early-emerging bumblebees work the early-spring bloom.
Blue flag iris
Iris versicolor
Documented
Blue vervain
Verbena hastata
Documented
A documented nectar plant for bumble bees; the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Verbena hastata as having Special Value to Native Bees.
Boneset
Eupatorium perfoliatum
Documented
Bumble bees are frequent visitors to the nectar-rich corymbs; the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags boneset as having special value to native bees.
Borage
Borago officinalis
Plausible
The open, accessible blue flowers are readily worked by bumble bees as well as honey bees; bumble-bee visitation follows from the documented general bee attraction (Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder; NC State Extension).
Carolina allspice (sweetshrub)
Calycanthus floridus
Plausible
Beetle-pollinated primarily; bees visit secondarily.
Catawba rhododendron
Rhododendron catawbiense
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center records special value to bumble bees, which are well-suited to working the deep funnel-shaped flowers.
Catmint
Nepeta x faassenii
Plausible
The open, two-lipped flowers are readily worked by bumble bees; bumble-bee visitation follows from the bee attraction NC State Extension documents for this plant.
Chives
Allium schoenoprasum
Documented
Comfrey
Symphytum officinale
Documented
The deep tubular bell flowers are a classic long-tongued bumblebee forage plant — bumblebees can reach the nectar at the base of the corolla that shorter-tongued bees cannot, making comfrey a reliable spring-to-early-summer nectar source.
Common bean
Phaseolus vulgaris
Documented
Bumblebees visit bean flowers opportunistically; bean is primarily self-pollinating but bee visitation increases fruit set + reduces pod abortion in some cultivars.
Common hyacinth
Hyacinthus orientalis
Plausible
Bumble bees emerging in early spring forage on hyacinth nectar where ranges overlap; NC State Extension documents bees generally as attracted, without naming species.
Common ninebark
Physocarpus opulifolius
Documented
Common thyme
Thymus vulgaris
Documented
Common yarrow
Achillea millefolium
Documented
Bumblebees work the flat-topped corymbs heavily through summer; yarrow is one of the most reliable mid-season pollinator plants for full-sun beds.
Cosmos
Cosmos bipinnatus
Documented
NC State Extension documents Cosmos bipinnatus as bee-friendly, with bumblebees shown visiting the flowers; the open composite blooms offer accessible nectar and pollen.
Dahlia
Dahlia (hybrid)
Plausible
Bumble bees visit the exposed disc florets of single and open-centered dahlias for nectar and pollen; double-flowered hybrids that hide the disc are far less useful.
Dwarf crested iris
Iris cristata
Documented
Eastern redbud
Cercis canadensis
Documented
Early-emerging bumblebee queens work the redbud flowers during the brief pre-leaf-out bloom window — redbud fills a critical early-spring nectar gap in eastern landscapes.
English lavender
Lavandula angustifolia
Documented
Long-tongued bumblebees and honeybees work lavender flower spikes heavily; lavender honey is a recognized regional product from Mediterranean Europe.
Flowering dogwood
Cornus florida
Documented
NC State lists specialized native Andrena mining bees among the primary pollinators; bumblebees and honeybees also work the small true flowers in the center of the bract arrangement.
Garden mum
Chrysanthemum x morifolium
Plausible
As a late-season composite flowering into frost, garden mum offers bumble bees nectar and pollen at the end of the season; bumble bee use is plausible from its documented pollinator-plant value rather than a species-specific record.
Garden sage
Salvia officinalis
Documented
Garden strawberry
Fragaria × ananassa
Plausible
Bumble bees readily work strawberry blossoms and are effective strawberry pollinators; mapped here as a representative native bumble bee rather than a species the source names specifically.
Genovese basil
Ocimum basilicum
Plausible
Globe artichoke
Cynara scolymus
Plausible
When buds are allowed to open, the large violet-blue thistle flowers (rated "Showy" by Missouri Botanical Garden) are rich in nectar and pollen and draw bumblebees and other bees; a bumblebee is visible working an open artichoke flower in reference photos of the species.
Hairy alumroot
Heuchera villosa
Documented
Indian pink
Spigelia marilandica
Documented
Lacinato kale
Brassica oleracea var. palmifolia
Plausible
Lemon balm
Melissa officinalis
Documented
Bumble bees work the small axillary flowers for nectar through summer; a bumblebee feeding at a lemon balm flower is among the commonly documented visitors.
New Jersey tea
Ceanothus americanus
Documented
Northern spicebush
Lindera benzoin
Documented
Early-emerging bumblebee queens work the spring flowers when few other native shrubs are blooming — spicebush fills a critical early-season gap.
Okra
Abelmoschus esculentus
Plausible
Bumble bees visit the large open mallow-family flowers for nectar and pollen during the long summer bloom.
Oregano
Origanum vulgare
Documented
Oregon grape
Berberis aquifolium
Documented
Pansy
Viola × wittrockiana
Plausible
NC State Extension documents that pansy flowers attract butterflies and other pollinators; bumble bees are plausible nectar visitors of the open, nectar-guided flowers, though the species pages do not name bumble bees specifically.
Prairie smoke
Geum triflorum
Plausible
The early, nodding spring flowers are a documented butterfly draw (Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center) and are typical of the early-season blooms worked by emerging queen bumble bees; bombus-impatiens stands in for the early native-bee foragers.
Red maple
Acer rubrum
Documented
The January-March bloom is among the earliest reliable nectar sources for emerging bumblebee queens in the eastern forest; red maple is a wedge-relevant pollinator support tree as much as a Lep host.
Red-osier dogwood
Cornus sericea
Documented
Rosemary
Salvia rosmarinus
Documented
Russian sage
Salvia yangii
Plausible
Bumble bees readily work the tubular two-lipped mint-family flowers; NC State documents bee visitation at the genus level rather than naming this species specifically.
Shasta daisy
Leucanthemum × superbum
Plausible
Bumble bees readily work shallow, open composite flowers like Leucanthemum; a plausible generalist visitor during the July-September bloom, inferred from flower morphology rather than a source-documented record.
Short-toothed mountain mint
Pycnanthemum muticum
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Pycnanthemum muticum as having Special Value to Bumble Bees; the flat-topped flower heads are a heavily worked nectar source through mid to late summer.
Snapdragon
Antirrhinum majus
Plausible
The closed, two-lipped personate corolla of Antirrhinum majus is classically opened by large, strong bees such as bumblebees, which pry the lips apart to reach nectar and pollen; lighter insects cannot work the flower. Listed as plausible because Missouri Botanical Garden names "butterflies" generically rather than a specific bumblebee species.
Spearmint
Mentha spicata
Documented
Stiff goldenrod
Solidago rigida
Documented
Late-season Solidago is a critical nectar source for bumblebees building winter reserves, alongside the closely-timed asters.
Summer savory
Satureja hortensis
Plausible
Open Lamiaceae flowers of the savory group are commonly worked by bumblebees; plausible by analogy to the documented bee attraction, not separately cited for this species.
Summersweet (sweet pepperbush)
Clethra alnifolia
Documented
NC State explicitly names native bees among the visitors; bumblebees + carpenter bees work the upright flower spikes heavily through the late-summer bloom window.
Sweet crabapple
Malus coronaria
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Malus coronaria as having special value to bumble bees, which work the fragrant spring flowers for nectar and pollen.
Sweet marjoram
Origanum majorana
Plausible
Open Lamiaceae flowers of the marjoram/oregano group are commonly worked by bumblebees; plausible by analogy to the documented honeybee use, not separately cited for this species.
Virginia sweetspire
Itea virginica
Documented
Western redbud
Cercis occidentalis
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Cercis occidentalis as having special value to bumble bees. (Bombus impatiens is the cataloged bumble bee stand-in; the documented value is to bumble bees as a group on the species’ western range.)
White clover
Trifolium repens
Plausible
Bumble bees readily work clover heads alongside honey bees; MBG documents bee attraction at the group level rather than naming individual bumble-bee species.
White wood aster
Eurybia divaricata
Documented
Wild geranium
Geranium maculatum
Documented
Wild strawberry
Fragaria virginiana
Documented
Woodland phlox
Phlox divaricata
Documented
Pollen plants · 13
Black willow
Salix nigra
Documented
Flagged as Special Value to Bumble Bees and Native Bees by the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center; the early-season catkins provide critical spring forage when queens are establishing colonies.
California poppy
Eschscholzia californica
Documented
Clematis
Clematis (hybrid)
Documented
The NC State Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox lists Clematis x jackmanii as attracting bees; common eastern bumble bees forage the pollen of the open showy flowers.
Dutch crocus
Crocus vernus
Plausible
Queen bumble bees emerging in early spring are commonly observed foraging on crocus pollen, an early-season resource when little else is in bloom. Recorded as plausible: the Missouri Botanical Garden species page does not assert a specific bumble-bee relationship.
Eggplant
Solanum melongena
Documented
NC State Extension documents that eggplant flowers attract bumblebees. Eggplant pollen is released by buzz (sonication) pollination, which bumblebees perform and honey bees largely cannot, so bumblebees meaningfully improve fruit set.
Garden rose
Rosa (hybrid)
Plausible
Bumble bees forage pollen at accessible rose flowers; access depends on petal density, so single and semi-double cultivars support them best.
Hollyhock
Alcea rosea
Plausible
The wide-open mallow flowers present abundant pollen that bumblebees readily work; Missouri Botanical Garden notes the species attracts butterflies and the flowers are broadly insect-visited, though the PlantFinder profile does not name a specific bee species.
Peony
Paeonia lactiflora
Plausible
The open, bowl-shaped flowers with an exposed stamen boss are readily worked by bumble bees; bumble-bee pollen foraging follows from the bee attraction NC State Extension documents for this plant.
Pumpkin
Cucurbita pepo
Documented
Common eastern bumble bees readily work the showy yellow Cucurbita flowers (Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder describes the bloom as showy) and are important generalist pollinators of pumpkin and squash.
Pussy willow
Salix discolor
Documented
Early-emerging bumble bee queens rely on the earliest-blooming plants; pussy willow catkins open while little else is in flower, providing critical early-season pollen and nectar.
Rose of Sharon
Hibiscus syriacus
Plausible
The Missouri Botanical Garden PlantFinder and NC State Plant Toolbox both list pollinators/bees among the visitors; the common eastern bumble bee is a plausible visitor to the large pollen-rich flowers, though the sources do not name this species specifically.
Wild lupine
Lupinus perennis
Documented
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Lupinus perennis with "special value to bumble bees" and "special value to native bees"; bumble bees are heavy enough to trip the keeled pea flowers open and are primary pollinators.
Wild senna
Senna hebecarpa
Documented
The NC State Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox records that bumblebees are attracted to the pollen of the nectarless flowers, and the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags special value to bumble bees.
Range
Eastern North America from southern Canada to Florida and west to the Great Plains.
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