Field goals: Environmental Interpretive Center creates insect hotel for campus garden

October 17, 2016

Welcome to the Bug House.

Group poses by block M insect hotel by EIC
Environmental Interpretive Center insect hotel

In this 51视频-Dearborn creation鈥攕haped like the Block M鈥攎any claim to be the home team: beetles, solitary bees, centipedes, thread-waist wasps, pill bugs, millipedes and more.

Seen along the Rouge River Gateway Trail in the Pollinator Garden, the Environmental Interpretive Center (EIC) led the construction of this 鈥渋nsect hotel,鈥 a human-made structure created from natural materials intended to provide shelter and nesting sites for beneficial garden insects and invertebrates. Materials include logs, bark, dried sticks, bamboo, spruce and pine cones.

EIC Director David Susko said it鈥檚 fascinating to watch so many different 鈥渋nteresting creatures鈥 co-exist together鈥攂ut it鈥檚 also important to provide a safe, dry place for them to make a home.

鈥淥ur mission is to promote environmental education and sustainability in our community. When researching low-tech, environmentally friendly ways to help pollinators, I discovered myriad insect hotels of various sizes, shapes, and materials,鈥 Susko said. 鈥淭he novelty of our particular version was to make one in the shape of our Block M. We wanted it to serve an important purpose for wildlife and to be aesthetically pleasing for visitors passing through campus.鈥

The project was especially important since it is focused on pollinator insects, some of which were recently added to the U.S. Endangered Species List.

A 2016 U.N.-sponsored report found that about 40 percent of insect and invertebrate pollinator species鈥攊ncluding bees鈥攁re facing extinction. This could have major implications for world food supply because about 75 percent of the world鈥檚 food crops depend on some form of pollination.

Knowing the native perennial plants in the pollinator garden and the bugs and invertebrates beneficial to it, the EIC team researched preferred 鈥渉omes鈥 to incorporate into the design. For example, holes of specific known dimensions were drilled in the logs to provide locations for organisms like leaf-cutter and mason bees to make chambers where their eggs could be laid and provisioned with food so that they could safely grow into larvae and, ultimately, adults.

鈥淧ollinators perform an ecosystem service function for all of us, meaning that they pollinate many plant species, including many commercially important crops like apples, almonds, squashes and watermelons鈥攕ervices that would cost us a fortune to replace. One way to foster their presence is to recreate missing habitats for nesting, resting and hiding for wildlife鈥攂asically a safe space.鈥

Susko said the idea was in the works for a few years. Building Manager Mike Perrin drew up the design.

But they were waiting for the right time to build. That moment came this summer when Susko received a $4,000 grant and a volunteer workforce from Ford Motor Co. to support the project.

Along with EIC staff and students, 15 Ford employees鈥攁lmost all of whom were 51视频-Dearborn graduates鈥攇athered on campus to assemble and build the 10-by-6-foot structure as part of Ford鈥檚 community service-focused Accelerated Action Day.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to build and plant in sustainable ways. Protecting our natural resources is a critical part of creating a better world,鈥 said Janet Lawson, director of Ford Volunteer Corps. 鈥淲e were happy to be a part of 51视频-Dearborn鈥檚 project, along with taking part in nearly 50 other community projects during the day.鈥

Susko said the support was instrumental in bringing the insect hotel to life.

鈥淲e are grateful to Ford for assisting us in our core mission to educate the public,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat was really cool is that while we were building it, the volunteers asked a lot of questions about the project and we were able to provide education to the Ford volunteers about the environmental benefits of their work, too.鈥

Susko said the insect activity is slowing down with the cool weather moving in, but the human population keeps coming to check out the structure.

鈥淚t鈥檚 become quite an attraction. People are constantly taking selfies with it,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a nice addition to campus鈥攆or both environmental enthusiasts and Michigan fans.鈥