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    • All About Favas
    • Fava Life Cycle: Flowers
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    • Black-Eye Peas
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    • Home
    • About
    • Fava Love
      • All About Favas
      • Fava Life Cycle: Flowers
      • The Fava Bean Recipe Book
      • WatchThem Grow
    • Black Eye Peas
      • Black-Eye Peas
      • George Washington Carver
      • Carver's Recipes
      • Community Science
      • Canned Frozen Fresh
    • Contact
    • Pollinators and Less Meat
    • Gallery
  • Home
  • About
  • Fava Love
    • All About Favas
    • Fava Life Cycle: Flowers
    • The Fava Bean Recipe Book
    • WatchThem Grow
  • Black Eye Peas
    • Black-Eye Peas
    • George Washington Carver
    • Carver's Recipes
    • Community Science
    • Canned Frozen Fresh
  • Contact
  • Pollinators and Less Meat
  • Gallery

Pollinators and other beneficial insects that favas attract

  

The fragrant and stunningly beautiful flowers of the fava bean plant bloom from a period of weeks to a month or more, providing pollinators like bumble bees (Bombus spp.), European honeybees (Apis mellifera), and other species of native bees with nectar for a relatively long period of time. 


Favas also have extra floral nectaries (see photo) that provide additional food to a number of pollinators and beneficial insects like parasitic wasps and predatory mites, ants, ladybug beetles and mites. Fava's extra-floral nectaries helps these tiny critters  survive during the winter, allowing them to feed on pests the following spring. 

Favas have extrafloral nectaries on its stipules, the leaf-like structures at the base of a leaf.

Favas have extrafloral nectaries on its stipules, the leaf-like structures at the base of a leaf. 


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