Critical late-season nectar source for late-summer bumblebees building reserves before winter dormancy; aster pollen is what some Bombus queens carry into hibernation.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags special value to native bees; bumble bees work the fragrant pale-yellow June cymes for nectar.
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center: special value to bumble bees — the early March bloom is an important pre-foliage nectar and pollen source.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
Spring hawthorn-like flowers attract bumblebees and other Rosaceae-visiting pollinators.
Early-emerging bumblebees work the early-spring bloom.
A documented nectar plant for bumble bees; the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags Verbena hastata as having Special Value to Native Bees.
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.
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).
Beetle-pollinated primarily; bees visit secondarily.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center records special value to bumble bees, which are well-suited to working the deep funnel-shaped flowers.
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.
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.
Bumblebees visit bean flowers opportunistically; bean is primarily self-pollinating but bee visitation increases fruit set + reduces pod abortion in some cultivars.
Bumble bees emerging in early spring forage on hyacinth nectar where ranges overlap; NC State Extension documents bees generally as attracted, without naming species.
Bumblebees work the flat-topped corymbs heavily through summer; yarrow is one of the most reliable mid-season pollinator plants for full-sun beds.
NC State Extension documents Cosmos bipinnatus as bee-friendly, with bumblebees shown visiting the flowers; the open composite blooms offer accessible nectar and pollen.
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.
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.
Long-tongued bumblebees and honeybees work lavender flower spikes heavily; lavender honey is a recognized regional product from Mediterranean Europe.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Early-emerging bumblebee queens work the spring flowers when few other native shrubs are blooming — spicebush fills a critical early-season gap.
OkraAbelmoschus esculentus
Bumble bees visit the large open mallow-family flowers for nectar and pollen during the long summer bloom.
PansyViola × wittrockiana
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Late-season Solidago is a critical nectar source for bumblebees building winter reserves, alongside the closely-timed asters.
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.
NC State explicitly names native bees among the visitors; bumblebees + carpenter bees work the upright flower spikes heavily through the late-summer bloom window.
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.
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.
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.)
Bumble bees readily work clover heads alongside honey bees; MBG documents bee attraction at the group level rather than naming individual bumble-bee species.