Bumble Bees Background
Using Digital Photography.
Bumble Bee Groups
Useful Links
Bumble
Bees play an important
role in pollination and there has been concern that
numbers are reducing. Climate, vegetation (changes in use of agricultural
land), competition from other bees, disease and the use of pesticides are
possible factors. W are being
encouraged by English Nature to manage our
gardens more sensitively for wildlife and a
leaflet to
‘Help save the Bumblebee’
is being made available.
Bluebells,
bugle, rosemary,
dead-nettle, geraniums,
foxglove, honeysuckle,
monkshood are identified as being ideal plants to add to our gardens specifically for bumblebees.
As well as creating local oasis's for Bumble Bees, there are a few things that
we can do to assess the bumble bee populations in our gardens.
Identification of
individual species creates a problem for reliable recording by untrained
observers, but recording groups of Bumble Bees determined by general banding
patterns is being looked at in survey by Rothamsted Research and it is
also initiating a survey focussing on
recording nests:
"Like all bees, bumblebees eat only pollen and nectar from flowers, and we know quite a lot about their tastes. Different bumblebee species like different flowers and they need a continual succession of flowers within range of their nests throughout the spring, summer and early autumn. Apart from food, bumblebees also require sites where they can nest. We know a bit about where they like to nest as well, but not enough to clearly advise landowners, farmers and gardeners on how best to provide nesting sites. This survey should help us to find out exactly how important different types of habitat, such as gardens, hedgerows, grassland, or woodland are as nesting sites for bumblebees, and whether different species have particular preferences". For more information see downloadable pdf files
Bumble Bee Projects. With the developments in digital photography, it is now possible to record the species we see in our gardens. I have started to build up a record of the different species visiting my own garden. Identification is still a problem, but it is possible to place the species into groups, as shown in the downloadable file above.
Useful Links
Bumblebee Conservation
Trust Raise
awareness of the
decline in species and provide guidance to
identify and conserve them, through
surveys,
Common Bumble Bees in Britain
from Spiny Software
The Bumble Bee pages
Bumblebee.org
Gallery of Garden Bumble Bees from Space for Nature
Leaflet from English Nature pdf file