Sunday, 29 April 2012

Article - The Humble Bumble Bee

 

It is difficult to imagine anything which describes an insect less adequately than the ‘humble bumble bee’. If only human counterparts could develop a system on equal terms as those practiced by the bumble bee, we would be in "Utopia".

This small article on the life cycle of the bumble bee, its habitat, its activities and its very necessary contribution to mankind’s well being will hopefully convince those who think "its only a bee" to think differently.

We will start with a single mated Queen bumble bee. She will have hibernated in a suitable nook or cranny during the cold winter months. She has survived on her body fat and has reduced her metabolism down to the very barest in survival.

As the spring days begin to warm she will leave her sanctuary and begin the task of finding a suitable nest site. This is a dangerous time as the weather can suddenly change from a warmish atmosphere into a cold, wet and windy spell which can cause many Queens to die. Her activities can be seen when she flies around likely places i.e. under a pile of stones, the base of the garden shed, an old mouse’s nest situated in the bottom of a dry hedgerow. She will start to collect what nectar there is in the early flowers and of course she will consume pollen. Nectar in its raw state is the bees’ carbohydrate and the pollen is its protein supply.

Once she has located a suitable nest site she produces a number of cells constructed from beeswax produced from glands in her body, again using up nectar and pollen for this production.

The cells have pollen placed in and some nectar, she lays an egg and in the early days of spring it will be necessary for her to fly on as many occasions as she can to keep the larder stocked. The larder is again made up of "wax cups" and these are filled with nectar.

As the first of the eggs hatch and become bumble bees, they in turn will take on the duties of collecting nectar and pollen for the oncoming infants. All these offspring are infertile females.

Once the numbers increase the Queen ceases flying and remains in the nest.
All summer the nest increases in size and towards late summer the Queen lays a number of male eggs, these turn into drones and she also produces Queens. When the drones and the new Queens are old enough they leave the nest and the Queens are mated by the drones. The drones die and the newly mated Queens find a suitable hiding place to hibernate for the winter, thus ensuring the propagation of the species. The remaining inhabitants of the nest, including the old Queen, die off when the days shorten and the forage becomes insufficient to sustain them.

There is a wide variety of bumble bee species and these vary from the very small dark backed with orange tails, to the very large black backed with white tails.

They do have a sting and are prepared to use it if they are threatened, but unlike the honey bee the sting doesn't have a barb so the bumble bee doesn't lose its sting when it stings so a bumble bee can sting more than once. Both Queen and worker can sting but not the male or drone.

What nicer sound can there be than to hear the steady drone of the bumble bee going about its tasks on a lovely warm summer’s day?

Bumble bees differ from our native honey bee in many ways, but they both need pollen for their existence so they are extremely important to farmers, growers, and gardeners alike for they have to be the finest pollinators in the world. Crops cannot produce seeds and fruits unless the flower has been pollinated. A very good example is "Oil Seed Rape" – the well known yellow flowers seen in many fields during early spring. This flower is wind pollinated but due to the early flowers being spaced out, there is a risk that the early flowers will not produce a seed pod if only relying on the wind for pollination. With adequate bumble bees or honey bees the crop can be increased by as much as 3 cwt. per acre.

It is necessary for us to try and conserve our green and pleasant land, but unfortunately we are not doing so in the correct manner.

There are many organisations making many efforts to correct a lot of the mistakes we have caused. Roadside spraying with herbicides has been greatly reduced. "Set aside" created in many rural areas has added to the habitat suitable for wildlife. Over the past 50 years, 150,000 miles of hedgerows have been pulled out with little replacement taking place. Broad-leaved woodlands have been cleared ponds and ditches filled in to make fields bigger – all these areas are the natural hunting ground of the bumble bee. When many hedges are cut there is great loss of nectar sources. Blackberry, hawthorn, wild hedgerow flowers are cut in their prime. Care should be taken to establish the end of the flowering in any species which will provide food for the bee’s larder. A well trimmed hedge looks very nice, but it will produce nothing for our bees. Let us think hard before we destroy what has been ours to enjoy for longer than we have been in existence.


Thursday, 12 April 2012

Bee Prepared!

Friends of the Earth Event 
at Staffordshire Wildlife Trust 
Saturday 14th April 11.00 - 4.00 pm

Find out why bees matter and how to create bee-friendly spaces in your area.

Agenda:
11.00      Informal networking over coffee - come early to view the stalls
11.30      Introduction and ice breaking Bee Quiz with prizes!
11.50      Guest speakers and discussion 
  • Introduction to 'Bee Cause' with Sarah Allan, The Bee Cause Team, Friends of the Earth
  • Bumblebees and solitary bees, with Ron Rock, Bumblebee Conservation Trust
13,00     Lunch (bring your own or visit garden centre adjacent)
  • Bee friendly tour of the Wolseley Centre grounds with Ron Rock
  • Pin the sting on the Bee and win a prize!
14.00    Guest speakers and discussion
  • Honey bees, with Peter Magee, South Staffordshire Beekeepers Association - with real bees!
14.40    Tea and coffee with local honey tasting

15.00    Action Plan: Tim and Sarah, what do we do next?
  • Creating bee friendly spaces in your local community
  • Working with children and young adults
  • Bee Action Plans and political change.
16.00   Wrap up

Following by social time, post gathering drinks and conversation.


Saturday 14th April at Staffordshire Wildlife Trust HQ Wolseley Bridge 
Free - (just book with Tim Atkinson on tim.atkinson@foe.co.uk) 
or telephone Staffordshire Wildlife Trust
Post Code: ST17 0WT
Telephone: 01889 880100

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

End The Denial Over Bee Poisoning

Sir Robert Watson chief scientist at the Department of the Environment (Defra), has acted bravely in ordering a reassessment of the licensing of neonicotinoid pesticides in the UK. The French government banned these poisons in 2000, after the deaths of half a million bee colonies; Germany, Italy, Slovenia and Switzerland followed after similar wildlife catastrophes.
Watson faces an uphill struggle; Defra, its Food and Environment Research Agency and the Advisory Committee on Pesticides have all resolutely ignored the many peer-reviewed studies from Europe, from as long ago as 1999, which proved the extreme toxicity of neoniocotinoids for honeybees, bumblebees and butterflies.
The wildlife NGOs are similarly in denial. With the honourable exception of Buglife, all have stood by silently as bees, pollinating insects, soil-invertebrates and farmland birds are wiped from the face of Britain's countryside.
Painful as it may be for Defra, the ACP and the leading wildlife bodies to admit that they got this wrong, they must call for a complete ban on these poisons now, or we will suffer complete ecological disaster in this country.
Graham White
Coldstream, Scottish Borders
Your report (31 March) that in the light of new research, the Environment Department's distinguished chief scientist, Sir Robert Watson, will review the safety of the notorious neonicotinoid pesticides, long blamed for the destruction of honey bees and other pollinators, is brilliant news.
Insect experts Buglife, supported by the Soil Association, first presented scientific evidence of the damage these new and dangerous chemicals are doing to pollinating insects during the last Labour government, at a bee seminar in 10 Downing Street called by Sarah Brown. Then and since, government scientists and regulators refused to act – just as their predecessors did 50 years ago when faced with evidence of the destruction of birds of prey by DDT. However, the battle to ban neonicotinoids is not over, as is clear from the denials of the latest science from chemical companies
Neonicotinoids are now known to have lethal impacts on bees at tiny doses, well below the levels regulators currently consider "safe". Most chemical sprays used on our food are declared "safe" by governments on the basis that the very small doses that often remain on food are below a level where they can affect humans or wildlife, and can thus be ignored. This latest research undermines a significant part of the safety case for all chemical sprays used in farming, and should lead to a fundamental rethink in how we farm.
Peter Melchett
Policy Director, Soil Association, Bristol

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

The 'Humble' Bumble Bee

Welcome

The decline in bumble bee populations over the years is dramatic and cause for great concern, not only because these wonderfully hard working creatures are such a joy to behold in our lovely English Country gardens, but because they are also responsible for pollinating more than one third of the crops of the food that we eat.(Far more so than the honey bee). 

This sad decline is due to many factors, not least of which is the loss of habitat for these foraging insects. Most of the meadows of the British Countryside have declined by up 95% since the early 1920's. Unless action is taken to halt this decline, the familiar buzzing sounds in your gardens at the height of summer will be lost forever.

The Bumble Bee Conservation Trust was formed 5 years ago, as a result of the bumble bee population decline.Based at Stirling in Scotland their aim is to monitor bumble bee populations in the United Kingdom and create an awareness amongst the British people and garner their support to help bees to once again thrive in gardens. 

Ron Rock, who is a local bumble bee enthusiast started giving illustrated talks at local events in and around Staffordshire last year. He was so well received and appreciated at these events, that he decided to set an event calendar for this year to cope with the demand. Following on from this, he suggested that a local group might be a good way to help our wonderful bees, so that local people could become involved and help educate others to be BEE friendly in their gardens. 

(go to contact page for details)   

(We can confirm, that since this was posted a new local group has indeed been formed and inaugurated. We are delighted to report that it has the approval of the Bumble Bee Conservation Trust (http://www.bumblebeeconservation.org.uk).

We had our first meeting in March, well supported and buzzing with ideas for the future. There will be more news on this in the coming weeks, so please stay tuned. Our ultimate aim is to inform, educate and increase awareness to the British public of the immense importance of our native bumble bees; and to protect and increase available habitat for them to thrive in their colonies).



     



The Sound of Summer

Bumblebees are beautiful, hard working and incredibly important pollinators. In the last 70 years two species have become nationally extinct, and others have declined dramatically. 

In short, bumblebees are in trouble...
Now imagine a different future, in which our towns and countryside are rich in colourful wildflowers and teeming with bees, other beneficial insects and a diversity of wildlife for everyone to enjoy...The Sound of Summer

 Bumblebees are worth millions of pounds to the economy. They give us affordable "five-a-day" fruit and vegetables. Many crops depend on bumblebees for pollination to varying degrees. Beans, fruits, tomatoes and soft fruit crops all need insect pollination. In total the value of Europe's insect pollinators is estimated at €14.2 billion.
Imagine if bee declines continued... We wouldn't starve, but we would have to eat much more rice, pasta and bread. A healthy diet would become much more expensive - perhaps unaffordable for some?
Now imagine a different future, in which our towns and countryside are rich in colourful wildflowers and teeming with bees, other beneficial insects and a diversity of wildlife for everyone to enjoy...

Bumble Bee Books we like