What they do
They transfer pollen between flowers while collecting nectar and pollen for their colony.

Genus Bombus
Bumble bees are important pollinators of many wildflowers and garden plants, helping ecosystems and food crops reproduce.
Category
Bees
Order
Hymenoptera
Family
Apidae
Also Known As
Bombus, bumblebee, bumble bee
Intro
At a glance
Food
Habitat
Seasonality
Where to look
Key takeaways
A quick summary you can scan in under 10 seconds.
They transfer pollen between flowers while collecting nectar and pollen for their colony.
A steady sequence of blooms from early spring to late fall, plus safe nesting and overwintering spots.
Plant a mix of pollinator-friendly flowers that bloom in different seasons.
Why it matters
Key Impacts
Identification
Stocky, rounded body with dense hair (often looks "fuzzy").
Usually larger than most other bees you’ll see on flowers.
Often moves deliberately from flower to flower, spending a few seconds feeding.
Carries pollen in "pollen baskets" on the hind legs (may look like bright clumps).



Range and habitat
Life cycle
Bumble bees have an annual colony cycle in many regions: a single queen starts a nest, workers build the colony through the warm season, and new queens are produced later. Because their needs change over time, the “right” habitat includes both early flowers for queens and late flowers for the end-of-season generation.
Queens emerge from overwintering and search for nectar, pollen, and a nest site. Early blooms can be critical fuel for nest-starting.
Worker numbers typically increase, and foraging becomes more constant. A wide variety of flowers supports steady colony growth.
Colonies often produce males and new queens. Late-blooming flowers help new queens build energy reserves.
New queens overwinter in sheltered spots (often in soil or leaf litter), while the old colony ends.
Gardening guide
Provide the right food and habitat to help this pollinator thrive.
Early season
Mid-season
Late season
Leave some leaf litter or a natural corner where soil and ground cover stay undisturbed.
Keep a few patches of taller grass or meadow-like growth (even a small strip helps).
Avoid frequent deep digging in every part of a garden; rotate where you disturb soil.
Maintain hedgerows, brushy edges, or native shrub borders for wind protection and cover.
If you mulch, consider leaving some areas with lighter mulch so ground-nesting sites remain possible.
Habitat loss/fragmentation that removes nesting sites and breaks up flower-rich areas.
Pesticides, including systemic pesticides (chemicals that get inside the plant), which can contaminate nectar and pollen.
Bloom gaps, especially landscapes with only spring flowers and little to eat later.
Climate stress that shifts bloom timing, increases heat events, or changes rainfall patterns.
Reduced plant diversity (too much lawn or single-species plantings) leading to poorer nutrition.
Take action
Plant for season-long bloom: choose a mix of early, mid, and late flowering plants (even containers count).
Grow more variety: include different flower shapes and colors to support different Bombus species and tongue lengths.
Skip pesticides: use non-chemical options first (hand-pulling, mulching, targeted watering, tolerant planting).
Leave a little "messy habitat": keep some leaf litter, taller grass, or an undisturbed corner for nesting/overwintering.
Student challenge
Do a 10-minute "bloom check" once a week—list what’s flowering now, then add one plant (or pot) to fill the next expected gap.
Examples
Examples from this subgroup. Status varies by region.
Bombus impatiens
This bumble bee is a familiar flower visitor in many human-shaped landscapes and can be an important pollinator in gardens and green spaces. It’s a useful “ambassador species” for noticing how season-long blooms support bee activity.
Bombus bimaculatus
This species is often associated with early-season activity, when queens are searching for food and nest sites. Supporting early blooms can make a real difference for bumble bee colony start-up.
Bombus terricola
This is a well-known northern bumble bee that highlights how important connected habitat and diverse flowers can be across a landscape. In some places, bumble bee populations can change over time, so local awareness and habitat support matter.
Definitions
What You Can Do
Turn this knowledge into action. Whether you plant a single pot or a whole garden, you are building a vital bridge for local biodiversity.
Join the movement to restore our shared habitats.