Showing posts with label green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green. Show all posts

Monday, 29 July 2019

Bumblebee flowers, which to choose? And their ecology

Most popular bumblebee flowers in late July

The garden centre is the obvious place to compare the attractions of different garden flowers. And, I discover, a good place to observe the ecology of bumblebees.


The main bumblebees on view today were white tailed: B terrestris and B lucorum
The most popular flowers by a mile were all colours and varieties of Salvia:



But if you look closely you can see that the bees are cheating the flowers by robbing nectar through a hole in the calyx [sepals] or corolla [tubular petals]



In the photos, nearly every flower has been broken into. 


 


The next most popular flowers were Echinacea



And after that: Penstemon, Veronica, Alstomeria, Cirsium, Helenium, Physostegia







and the Common Carders favoured Nepeta





Thursday, 11 July 2019

Flowers for bees in July

Which flowers attract bumblebees this July?

I've seen fewer bumblebees in my garden and the countryside in the South West this week.

 Cue a visit to the nearby Botanical Garden to find which bumblebees are active and which flowers are providing pollen and nectar.
  Hebe flowers from New Zealand seem the most attractive; here's a Bombus lucorum [queen?] heavily weighed down with bundles of pollen

Also among the Hebe flowers, there were tree bumblebees: Bombus lapidarius 

Another popular flower is the   St Johns Wort : Hypericum which attracted common carder been, Bombus pascuorum carrying red pollen loads
 

And Bombus lucorum, here carrying a yellow pollen load

And Japanese anemones





Sunday, 23 June 2019

Do bumblebees hold grudges?

Do bumblebees hold grudges?

Late June and the Cotswold brambles are coming into flower. 


attracting our smallest bumblebees, like this Bombus pratorum worker

and our largest, like the White-tailed bumblebees, Bombus lucorum



 each lucorum bee seems to linger on the bramble flower to savour every single drop of sweet nectar. Sometimes colliding with bramble thorns as they search for new flowers. Are they intoxicated? Sometimes they seem a little dizzy and poorly coordinated as they fly between the thorns.

I startled one lucorum sunning itself on the grass. It flew up into the brambles and barged a fellow lucorum bumblebee that was gorging on bramble nectar. She was taken unawares and fell like a stone onto the grass. Moments later she reappeared and smacked into the offending bee, causing it to fly off in search of another flower.

Could they be from the same colony? Or were they rivals for the food which seemed plentiful. All around, there were open bramble flowers; why pick on the bee on this one particular flower?

Saturday, 20 October 2018

October Bumblbee Quest

Where might you find bumblebees now that October is here?


Well on warm sunny days you could try any flowering plants. 

This rosemary bush is still well in flower and was still producing nectar on the 19th October for honey bees and the odd carder bee so there are still active colonies of carder bees.

Also Lavendar where it's still in flower





The other place you might try looking is fruiting ivy which is popular with wasps and bees:

However I saw lots of wasps, the odd hornet and quite a few honey bees but not a single bumblebee. There was a red admiral butterfly that returned several times while I was watching, though.
The ivy has been buzzing with insects today, 20th October.

Friday, 21 September 2018

Should I be surprised? Bumblebees are active

September bumblebees

White-tailed bumblebees are still collecting pollen, 

Here's a white-tailed bumble on a windy day on 18th September, feeding on an evergreen Hebe shrub, [sapphire variety] in a park in Bristol:



Around mid-September I expected queen white-tailed bumblebees to be seeking a quiet underground tunnel to overwinter. In fact I photographed a queen bee doing exactly that back in August. 
But this worker bee indicates otherwise.

She's carrying a pollen basket, signifying that she's still collecting pollen for her colony. After many mild winters and speculation about global warming maybe I shouldn't be surprised at this even on mild days in October. 
I guess you're still going to find bumblebees if you look in October and November. 
But if you do see one, is it a queen about to hibernate, a lone survivor or a worker and member of a persistently active colony?

Menawhile here's a common carder been on white deadnettle in the same park
The strong wind was causing this bee considerable problems.

And here's a common carder bee feeding on a Fuchsia in a Bristol garden after 5pm. 



That's a long day's work.








Friday, 14 September 2018

Bumblebee sightings

Where bumblebees go in September

Here in Gloucestershire there are two places where you can reliably find bumblebees, well OK after borage, teasel, Corydalis, laurel and Buddleia...
  In gardens around here an annual that returns every year is popular with white-tailed bumblebees: Sedum


It's easy to grow and would fit into a small space like a car port.

Out in the countryside 

there seems to be a lot of unclaimed nectar among the white and red clover, trefoil and vetches which are still in flower. 
Is it too windy out in the fallow strips beside the ploughed fields?

The place where I can reliably find bees is by the stream where the mint grows.

Do bumblebees fix on just one source of nectar? 

Sometimes bees can be seen flying from one flower to another of the same species, usually starting from the bottom and working there way upwards. 
Do they overlook other possible sources in a bid to save time? 

Just occasionally I see a bee darting from teasel to corydalis to cranesbill to take tiny sips. 
Is this a sign of desperation due to falling nectar production in late summer?

There are some tree bumblebees around; I just haven't been able to catch one on camera. 
I am trying to find bees other than common carder bees and white-tailed bumblebees.



Tuesday, 11 September 2018

Bumblebees: using all the senses

Sight, sound and smell are all needed 

 to track down bumblebees in September. 

On windy days like today bee flight can seem erratic. Even if you catch sight of a bee it can rapidly disappear.
   Listening to the buzz may help you to tell wasps, flies and bumblebees apart. The tone of a bumblebee is deeper and by listening carefully you can work out the bee's speed and direction. There are probably differences in tone between bumblebees that would help you identify which bee it is.
  Smell is helpful too in noticing when flowers are producing nectar. Stand by a fruiting ivy in September and you can smell the nectar on the leeward side [the opposite side to the wind].
Yellow Corydalis is a self-sown plant [also known as a weed] attracting bees during mild weather in mid-September:




On mild windy days, yellow corydalis which grows beside walls offers a source of nectar that's less blown about.


The other reliable fall back for bumblebees in rain is white deadnettle:


which seems to provide nectar even on windy and wet days:


Maybe it's more productive than clover and scabious which don't seem to be visited as often in September.



Sunday, 2 September 2018

September bumblebees

Where do bumblebees go in September?

You don't see as many bumblebees in late summer but they haven't all disappeared. 

Where to look?

  4 places you could try

1 Ivy

IVY is in fruit throughout September so you could look there but just at the moment wasps and hoverflies seem to dominate:


There are some bumblebees,


 I wonder if wasps are competing with bees and winning, though I think the balance may change as wasps die back in autumn.


2 Garden and wasteland flowers: 
such as the ever abundant Buddleia 
And lavendar

  But also wasteland plants like green alkanet and white deadnettle that are attracting common carder bees:
And of course garden centres and open gardens. 

                                     3 Beside streams:

The much maligned alien plant which aggressively colonises streams and rivers.  In Somerset this week, this is one of the best places to look: the tallest annual in Britain has established a niche: Himalayan Balsam, Impatiens glandulifera



 It may be a musty-smelling invader that flings its seeds explosively up to 4 metres through the air but it's an ideal source of nectar.
In Somerset you find Common carder bees and white-tailed bumblebees climbing inside the policeman helmet-shaped flowers. 



                                     4 In lawns and in the undergrowth:
You might look in the undergrowth, where queen bees are looking for places to hibernate.

Here's a white-tailed queen bumblebee burrowing a hole in a lawn in Somerset.





Thursday, 16 March 2017

Natural Mindfulness

Natural Mindfulness is 'letting Nature in' 
but what does this mean exactly?

  To me, it means look, listen and feel. It's March so we're used to looking out for the first flowers that appear in spring: lesser celandines:





and Coltsfoot

I can't switch off my thinking but I can direct it to the spontaneous events that are happening all around me while walking in nature. Like the emergence of a Comma butterfly from hibernation.

I find listening especially helpful. So I walk slowly, I pause but not in a self-conscious way; I listen for ten seconds and I'm constantly asking myself: 
    "What's special and different today?"
I can't see them but I can hear nuthatches and jackdaws, a buzzard flies overhead. These are the kind of things that make me glad to be alive.
Seasons change imperceptibly but every day reveals more preparations for the season ahead.
Today I heard fieldfares and song thrushes together. These two members of the thrush family overlap but soon the fieldfares will be migrating back to Norway and Sweden to nest.

  So today I heard woodpeckers drumming, a typical sound that belongs to British springtime:



That greater spotted woodpecker has found a particularly resonant tree which he's using to announce his presence to females and other males.
Look, listen and feel and it's different every day.


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