A quick thread on why helping #bumblebee queens who might get trapped in your house, conservatory, greenhouse or polytunnel to escape quickly is so important at this time of year. Please pass it on/#retweet. Thanks.🙏🏼 1/10 #bees#bumblebees
First: the #bumblebee lifecycle in brief.
Queens emerge from hibernation in early spring. They’re hungry obviously and need food. They feed up and immediately set about searching for a suitable site to establish a nest. 2/10 #bees#bumblebees
Once they identify a suitable site they store a small amount of food and lay their first batch of eggs. They sit on these eggs to keep them warm making necessarily efficient foraging trips in between to maintain the energy required to produce the heat for the eggs. 3/10 #bees
These eggs will produce the first brood of female workers - usually quite small #bumblebees - that will then assist the queen (foraging, nursery and other in nest duties) to produce and raise subsequent broods. The queen generally remains in the nest from this point. 4/10 #bees
Later in the summer the queen will produce male #bumblebees and ‘next year’s’ queens. Males will mate with new queens from other colonies and likewise new queens with males from other colonies.
The old queen, female workers and males die off naturally in the autumn. 5/10 #bees
The new queens forage to put on enough fat to survive hibernation until the following spring. They locate a suitable hibernation site and tuck in for the winter hopefully to emerge next spring to set up a brand new nest and repeat the process. 6/10 #bumblebees#bees
So you will generally see bumblebee queens on the wing in spring & late summer. Queens are obviously fundamental to nest establishment & success of their species. Every queen that survives is a nest that gets to exist & subsequent production of a future generation of queens. 7/10
If she dies her nest either never gets to be or dies with her.
Queen #bumblebees are out foraging around now to take on the resources to allow them to hibernate successfully until next spring.
It is estimated that one in five will not survive hibernation. 8/10 #bees
If you find a bee trapped in your house, polytunnel etc & you act quickly to #help her escape you are helping to ensure that a new nest is established next year. If you don’t and she dies then that nest won’t happen.
Our native wild #bees are in trouble. They need all the…9/10
..help they can get.
Saving any trapped bee is important. Savings/helping out queen #bumblebees in spring/late summer is vital.
So do your bit. It’s a small ask. Be vigilant. Help them out. Thanks for reading. For caring. For sharing. For acting.
Long Live the Queen! 10/10 #bees
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#Bee Twitter - I put up a thread last Sunday about queen #bumblebees this time of year and how to help - thanks to you it got 800k+ impressions meaning tens of thousands of people are better ‘bee informed’.
Can we do it again?
PLEASE RETWEET this new thread to help save more 1/9
…#queens. Bumblebees don’t understand glass - they get confused and trapped and exhausted. Likewise with polytunnel plastic. So if you see or hear a #bumblebee buzzing & banging against your window she’s not trying to get into your house to hang with you - she’s confused. 2/9
If she’s already inside your house and is buzzing at the window she’s trapped. So you need to get her out &
as quickly as you can - don’t leave her suffer while you do something else. Why? #Bumblebees with a full stomach have about 40 minutes of ‘energy’ in them before they 3/9
Lots of people asking us about #bumblebees at the moment - why they’re seeing them on the ground - so here’s a quick thread to explain what they’re up to. Please share as every #queen that survives means a new colony that gets to exist & produce new queen #bees for next year! 1/7
Bumblebee queens emerge in early spring from hibernation and immediately need to feed - that’s why early flowering plants are so important. Apart from feeding, their mission at this time is to find a suitable site to establish a nest. Hence you will observe queens flying low 2/7
…to the ground zig-zagging across the landscape - they’re house-hunting. Stopping to explore in long grass and vegetation, hollows in trees, stone walls, under sheds and even compost heaps. During this time bumblebee queens spend a lot of their time resting between flights. 3/7
2/6..office number - leave a message. Did.
Received call this morning from this office.
Explained situation - illegal hedge cutting, video footage and fact that roads engineer from council had taken a look and confirmed to me that it wasn’t for road safety and was illegal. His..
3/6..immediate response was to start telling me that the council have to ensure that roads are safe. Again I pointed out to him that engineer had confirmed it wasn’t a road safety issue - as he obviously wasn’t listening when I had told him this 10 seconds earlier. He then..
4/6.started to tell me about how vague the Wildlife Act is..I stopped him and told him I know but this wasn’t relevant here. His next move was to tell me it’s actually not in his jurisdiction and he’d give me the number of his colleague - the original ranger we tried to contact..
I can post pretty pictures of nature and supply facts about bees and leave it at that and we can all feel cosy and fine and good.
Except I can't. The truth as we see it on the ground needs to be told. It's easy to fall into the trap of presuming because you encounter it on..1/13
..a daily basis that everyone realises what is going on in our countryside. But we don't think that most people do.
The following account might help.
Tuesday before last we hear two chainsaws in action - nearer than usual.
We go to investigate and observe a local thug who..2/13
is not a landowner and his three kids cutting down mature trees in a hedgerow on private land adjoining us. The landowner in question has absolutely no regard for nature and is well known for his antics.
I phone the NPWS Ranger at 3.15pm to report this.
His immediate..3/13