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Davey Bulletin January-February 2026

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20 THE DAVEY BULLETIN | January/February 2026 INSECTS PART OF INSTITUTE RESEARCH AT SEED CAMPUS Behind the SEED (Science, Employee Education, and Development) Campus' main building is a wonderful world of buzzing bees and fluttering butterflies thanks to studies overseen by Davey Institute research lab staff. Using multiple clover and pollinator plots, employees can study which types of bees visit certain flowers and how different pesticides affect flower visitation. These plots on SEED Campus land are divided into equally shaped and spaced squares and seeded using different methods, including slit, drone and broadcast seeding. Next to the pollinator plots are bee hotels, where head of beekeeping Alex Kramer and his team study the western honeybee and even harvest honey themselves. "People don't know how vital bees are in everyday life," Kramer, lab technician, Davey Institute, said. "Without bees, there wouldn't be any nuts, fruits or vegetables on our dinner tables. They're also interesting because they all work together to maintain a hive. They've had a system that has worked for millions of years – honeybees are proof that working together works." With monarch releases, the team is attempting to understand what animals try to eat monarchs and the frequency with which they are attacked as caterpillars. Many of the research sites are in backyards around Ohio. Kat Hutchison, lab technician, Davey Institute, began rearing the caterpillars into butterflies and collecting their frass, which is insect waste, in 2025 as an added variable to the project. The next phase of the study involves covering clay model caterpillars with the frass to see if the smell affects a predator's visitation frequency. "That study, along with the others we are diligently working on, will help create a suite of conservation ideals that can potentially be implemented into the everyday operations of Davey offices and service lines," Kramer said. Kat Hutchison (left) and Alex Kramer are checking a beehive that is maintained at the SEED Campus for research purposes. VISION

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