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Plight of the bumblebee



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Published Date: 15 May 2008
URGENT action is needed to save bumblebees in Scotland from rapid rates of decline or some species could be wiped out, environmental experts have warned.
Professor Colin Galbraith, of Scottish Natural Heritage, called on everyone to do their bit to help, as he launched Scottish Biodiversity Week yesterday.

Without bumblebees many foods, such as Scotland's renowned raspberry crops, would not exist,
as they would not be pollinated.

But the vital creatures are under threat because of a lack of flowers in the countryside, particularly as a result of intensive farming.

The Bumblebee Conservation Trust has already warned that out of 25 native species of bumblebee across the UK, three have already become nationally extinct and five more are under threat, including the great yellow bumblebee, and large garden bumblebee.

Professor Galbraith said: "The great yellow bumblebee is now found only in the Western Isles and in a few dots in the North- west.

"It has become a Scottish speciality. When its range becomes so restricted then it really is under threat and it may disappear completely."

He added: "The key message is that everybody can help a little bit. Even if it's only putting out a flower pot for bees to nest in."

Shona Turnbull, the biodiversity implementation officer at Scottish Natural Heritage, said: "The most important tip is to plant a range of nectar- and pollen-rich flowers."

She suggested willow, lavender, herbs such as thyme and rosemary, and foxgloves as particularly good options for attracting bumblebees and added that an upturned flower pot could provide them with a perfect nest.

"Scotland is quite famous for its raspberries, but we rely on bumblebees to pollinate them, as well as things like runner beans and broad beans," she said.

"Bumblebees play an important role as a key pollinator of our crops and kitchen gardens."

Scottish Biodiversity Week runs from 19 to 25 May and is a celebration of the country's wildlife.

Mike Russell, the environment minister who helped launch the event, said: "Biodiversity is all living things around us. This means that it affects all of us and all of us can do something to help.

"It is our woodlands and wildlife, our rivers and seas, but it is also our gardens and parks.

"Scottish Biodiversity Week lets us see and enjoy the big, important things but also the small, just as important, aspects like bumblebees and wildflowers."

Honey bees are also under threat. Whole colonies have been dying in hives in Europe and the United States.

Scientists are struggling to explain the deaths.

This week, German officials announced the unexplained deaths of hundreds of thousands of bees in the southern state of Baden-Württemburg.

Honey bee colonies in the US have been falling since 1980 and the number of beekeepers has halved.







The full article contains 468 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 May 2008 9:52 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 15/05/2008 07:18:53
WE must import Eastern European bumble bees since our own are refusing to work for the wage on offer.
2

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 15/05/2008 07:20:13
Rules

Funny man! Good.

Anyway. Too many song birds wolfing the bee's down. OObviously as the bee's predator numbers rise, thier own population will decline.
3

Nomada,

15/05/2008 07:52:36
You have 'OObviously' still not got past p1 of your book on Ecology for Numpties, Dave #2.

First, few if any honey and bumble bees are eaten by songbirds in this country (Scotland).

Second, when you reach the end of the book you will have discovered that whether increased predation reduces prey numbers is entirely dependent on whether prey numbers are limited by predation. In bumblebees they are not. As the article says '...the vital creatures are under threat because of a lack of flowers in the countryside, particularly as a result of intensive farming'.

As you are on Barra, one of the best places in the country for the great yellow bumblebee, I would have thought a great ecologist like yourself would have noticed the connection.
4

Dooogie,

Highland 15/05/2008 07:55:36
Dont look now, but the hills are alive with the sound of hundreds of thousands of Queen bumblebees - possibly millions of them. People dont see many bumbles just now because there are only queen bumbles on the wing with very few, if any young bumbles - which are small to start with, but increase in size as the colonies grow in numbers and the queen bumble stays in her nest to lay eggs and establish the next generation.

Unlike honey bees, which overwinter in colonies, only the overwintered mated young queen bumbles - produced the previous autumn, are on the wing at the start of summer. The same system is used by wasps.
We hear this story every year! I'll guarantee it will also appear next year.
5

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 15/05/2008 08:08:00
3

http://www.birdersworld.com/brd/default.aspx?c=a&id=817

Yes they do. Grow up.

The area of wildflowers grown in Scotland (deliberately and not deliberately) has never been larger since the 1940's. Go check the agri stats from SGRPID.

It's the Northern Colletes bee that is the one here that we are encouraging and by the way Nomada, ever heard of the European Bee eater (Merops apiaster)?

Once you finish your Ladybird Big Book of Beasties, come back to the grown ups for a proper chat.
6

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 15/05/2008 08:09:13
And I have seen literally hoards of House Martins coming back to thier nests with beaks full of bees for thier chicks
7

Dave from Barra ©,

Western Isles 15/05/2008 08:24:03
...and I've seen tiddles eat quite a few bumble bees as well.
8

Nomada,

15/05/2008 08:42:23
Dave #5-#7. You never fail to write rubbish on the subject of wildlife and ecology, convinced that you know more than those of us who actually are trained and work in the field.

The Northern Colletes bee (not a bumblebee) is not '*the* one here that we are encouraging', but *another* one, in addition to the great yellow bumblebee. And yes, I have heard of the European Bee-eater, and seen quite a lot of them too, but you will need to search quite hard to find any in Scotland. Are you going to tell us next that Barra is covered in them, scoffing great yellow bumblebees by the dozen?
9

Guga II,

Rockall 15/05/2008 09:40:12
Are bumblebees the big fat ones that look like overweight wasps?
10

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 15/05/2008 09:50:51
Fascinating that neither Prof Galbraith - nor any of the politicians quoted saw fit to mention PESTICIDES! The reason that ALL British insects, bees, butterflies etc are all declining - many already extinct is because every single acre of arable crops in the UK is drenched with insecticides, fungicides and herbicides - often up to 14 sprayings per field in a single season.

Al those tractors with spray booms going up and down the fields all day long at this season - are spraying poisons, bio-cides to eliminate all wildflowers, weeds, insects etc. Tragically - along with the aphids and cabbage beetles they are meant to target, thee poisons also kill every earthworm, bee, butterfly and beetle in the field. All those lovely bright yellow fields you see are biological deserts. All those green wheat and barley fields have been drenched in herbicides to kill any other kind of plant or wildflower.

One single pesticide - IMIDACLOPRID - a systemic nerve poison that is INSIDE the plants - inside the sap, the leaves, the pollen, the nectar and the grain (inside YOU) - is now used on over 3 million acres of crops in the UK. It kills every insect that visits the crop to feed on nectar or pollen - every bee, every hoverfly, every bumblebee, every butterfly. It kills them by blocking nerve impulses. It persists in the soil of a field for four years. So, if you turn the entire arable fields of Scotland into biological deserts - you should not be surprised if wildlife disappears. Of course, you won't hear Prof Galbraith say that; SNH is NEVER going to criticise the farming or pesticide industries.
11

Lillig,

15/05/2008 10:19:46
No 10 Tweedmouth - Thankyou, my thought exactly.

Why else are there unexplained deaths by the thousand across Europe and the US. It has to be related to some human activity as there hasn't been an increase of bee eating birds.

It isn't enough to increase wild flowers and plants if these are going to be contaminated by pesticide. There must be bio-free areas.

Imagine what these pesticides are slowly doing to humans.
12

Nomada,

15/05/2008 10:52:06
Tweedmouth #10 writes: 'All those lovely bright yellow fields you see are biological deserts'.

If that is true down with you, it is certainly not the case farther north. OSR fields (conventional, not organic) there are alive with a good variety of insects, including honey bees and some species of bumble bees. What has to be understood is that not all flowers suit all insects. Some insects (often the rarer ones) are more specialised in their choice of flower than others, and the OSR does not generally attract these rare insects.
13

Partan,

Fife 15/05/2008 13:23:23
#9
Aye, Guga. They're the fellas. ;o)

ps Have you got the same ecology book as Dave?
14

Boy Wonder,

15/05/2008 14:22:30
The bees have all emigrated because of the waspish comments of the public!!

 

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