A Manifesto for bumblebess
Giving bumblebees a vote
6 October 2023
By Darryl Cox, Senior Science & Policy Officer
On Wednesday 27 September, the latest State of Nature report was released. Alarmingly, it shows that one in six species in the UK are at risk of extinction. For pollinators, the picture is pessimistic – they’ve declined by 18% since 1970. The report boils down to the bad news – nature is in a terrible state, and the good news – we know how to turn it around and we have evidence to show what works. But this is a nature crisis, so we need to get our skates on.
Cue, Chris Packham, TV presenter and life-long conservationist, turned activist, who in the weeks leading up to State of Nature being published worked with his small team to rally the environmental and wildlife conservation sector to make a stand for nature outside the offices of the UK Government’s Department for Environment, Farming and Rural Affairs. The Restore Nature Now demonstration took place in London on Thursday 28 September, with other smaller protests outside regional offices around the country. Its purpose was to bring people together to speak up for nature and to demand the government takes urgent and meaningful action to restore nature. No more rolling back on the laws that protect nature, no more rolling back on promises to meet our net zero commitments.
For the first time in the Bumblebee Conservation Trust’s history, we joined forces with the 40+ organisations and hundreds of individuals who gathered to protest in London. It was a legal and peaceful protest, filled with ordinary people who care about what is happening to our natural world, people who have had enough of things not going in the right direction and people who are rightly worried for the future. To be there alongside them, to hear the stories, the hopes, the fears, the demands, and the visions for a better future, was a humbling experience. My colleagues and I spent our time talking to people about the bumblebee manifesto, which aims to highlight the key changes we need to see to get bumblebees and other pollinators thriving again. I also had the honour to take to the stand to speak up for bumblebees and promote a message of hope – if you’re interested, you can catch what I imagine the bumblebees would have liked to have said in the video below.
At the end of the protest, Chris Packham took to the stand. He applauded the environmental sector for coming together to stand up for nature but warned that more action may be necessary. For those who may be confused by the title of his recent TV programme, he wasn’t talking about breaking the law – no paint, no powder, no glue. He was talking about the legal right to peacefully protest, and the fact nature needs people now more than ever: “Nature doesn’t have a voice, but we do. Nature can’t act, but we must.”
If all of that has you feeling worried for the future and angry about the lack of progress to help nature from our governments, you’re not alone. It’s said that action can be one of the best remedies for those experiencing eco-anxiety, especially collective action. Here are four things you can do in this moment to stand up for nature:
- Read and share the Manifesto for Bumblebees, especially with your elected representatives and local candidates. Be sure to add #BumblebeeManifesto on any social media.
- Get involved with the Nature Can’t Wait campaign which has toolkits and resources to help you engage with your elected representatives about nature and the urgent actions needed to restore it.
- Talk to your friends, family, colleagues, classmates, neighbours, bus-drivers, anyone who will listen, about how wonderful and important nature is and how much it needs people to stand up for it, now more than ever.
If you are looking for simple actions to help bumblebees in your green space or community, visit our Bee the Change page for simple, quick mirco actions.
What does a changing climate mean for the UK’s bumblebees?
6 December 2021
By Dr Richard Comont, Science Manager and Darryl Cox, Senior Science and Policy Officer
With the world talking climate following COP26, our science team take a look at what a changing world means for the UK bumblebees.
At a global scale, bumblebees are cool-weather creatures, most at home in the world’s cool, damp temperate regions. The climate of these areas is predicted to be changed substantially by global warming. Research on bumblebees’ global ranges finds that, as the climate warms, the area of hospitable conditions for each species (its climate niche) is moving towards the Poles. Therefore, bumblebees in Europe will need to move northwards to stay within their niche. This will be particularly apparent at the southern edge of species’ ranges: if species don’t manage to move northwards fast enough, they won’t survive.
Most of our UK species are towards or at the northern edge of their ranges in Britain. These species may become more widespread across the country in the near future – for instance, the northwards movement of several species such as the Buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) over the past few decades is likely to be at least partially linked to the changing climate. However, we also have species which are close to their southern range edge. These species are likely to be more and more at risk as the climate changes, and the size of their habitable areas shrinks. For example, the Great Yellow bumblebee (Bombus distinguendus) is now only found on some Scottish islands and a thin strip of the mainland north coast, and the Moss carder bee (Bombus muscorum) is widespread in Scotland but undergoing a severe decline further south, in England and Wales.
Other species are at risk because they are specialised to a habitat which itself will decline as the climate warms. The Bilberry bumblebee (Bombus monticola) thrives on bilberry moorland, mostly above 300m. As climate change takes effect, the habitable zone for these species moves not just northwards but also uphill, leaving smaller areas of isolated habitat (essentially, hilltops) which eventually become too small and the species will die out there.
For bumblebees to survive in a climate change world, they must be able to move northwards, tracking their habitable zones. There is evidence that species’ southern range edges are moving northwards, and other species are moving uphill. Concerningly, however, there is little evidence of northwards range shifts, meaning species ranges are growing increasingly restricted. A recent climate risk atlas for European bumblebee species found that most species are likely to decline significantly under current warming scenarios.
So why should this be the case? Well, we know that bumblebees also experience other pressures and, in the UK and across most of Western Europe, the historical driving force behind bumblebee declines has been the loss and fragmentation of bumblebee habitat, driven by development and the intensification of agriculture. In fragmented and flower-depleted landscapes, it is more difficult for species to move through the landscape and migrate into new areas. This is particularly difficult for species which are more sensitive to habitat quality, for example those with stronger preferences for particular flowers or shorter foraging ranges, and for those species which are not strong dispersers. In both cases the nearest suitable habitat is likely to be too far away or too hard to reach. The combined effect of climate change and habitat loss & degradation is to leave small pockets of populations isolated in areas which are becoming increasingly unsuitable for them – like fish in evaporating puddles after a flood.
Of course, climate change doesn’t just mean that temperatures increase: it also increases the frequency and severity of extreme weather events like floods, storms and droughts. It is these which will present the most immediate climate-related impacts for bumblebees in Britain. Floods can wipe out hibernating queens, and colonies nesting in the ground. Severe droughts can reduce nectar availability at critical points of the colony lifecycle, reducing the nest’s production of new queens – next year’s colonies. Increased storm frequency and severity, particularly allied to sea level rises in coastal areas, could have severe impacts for some of our rarest species. Many of these are now largely coastal, or are restricted to low-lying areas such as the Somerset or Gwent Levels at risk of seawater infiltration or flooding. The Great Yellow bumblebee, one of our rarest species, is almost entirely restricted to the machair, dune grasslands at risk from Atlantic storms and rising sea levels.
More widely, shifts in seasonal patterns such as earlier springs could create a mis-match of timings between flower availability and bumblebee queens. Queen bumblebees emerging from their winter dormancy need to find nectar as soon as they can in order to recover from their long months of hibernation. Queens then need to find both nectar and pollen as they establish a nest on their own. Reducing the food available to them at this crucial point can have a major effect on survival.
What can be done to help bumblebees combat climate change?
Obviously a key thing is minimising the amount of climate change that happens. Without this crucial step, other actions are treating the symptoms rather than the root cause.
Unfortunately, even in the best-case scenario there will be a considerable change to the climate and we must help bumblebees to survive the change. We know that well-fed bumblebees with high-quality places to nest and hibernate are better able to respond to the challenges they face. The priority for bumblebees therefore remains getting flowers back into the landscape and ensuring they have flowers available right through their flight season, March-October. This is something that everyone can help with, from individual gardens or window boxes, to community greenspace planting, right through to large-scale meadow creation. Our Bee the Change campaign has resources to help you achieve this.
Thankfully, meadow creation – one of the very best ways to help bumblebees and lots of other wonderful wildlife – is also a really good way of storing carbon in our landscapes. By restoring or creating the flower-rich grasslands we have lost over the last hundred years, we can help our plant life and wildlife to recover and tackle the climate crisis. Increasing the abundance and diversity of flowers in these habitats boosts biodiversity and increases the amount of carbon stored in the soil below. Take a look at our Land Management for guidance.
Beyond providing food and habitats for bumblebees, you can join in with the Bumblebee Conservation Trust’s work through attending an event, volunteering, donating, or becoming a member to help create a world in which bumblebees can thrive.
Our position on managed honeybees
9 March 2020
The Trust has published a new position statement on managed honeybees. The statement has been prompted by concerns that, under certain circumstances, managed honeybees can have detrimental impacts on wild pollinator species, including bumblebees.
Our Senior Science & Policy Officer, Darryl Cox, provides the background on why we’ve decided to publish the statement.
Q1. What prompted the Trust to produce the position statement?
There is an increasing body of research which shows that, in some situations, beekeeping can have negative consequences for bumblebees (and potentially other pollinators) by increasing competition for food and by passing on diseases. These negative consequences are most marked in areas where there are fewer flowers or higher densities of honeybee hives, and could potentially be serious where vulnerable populations of wild bees are present. This statement aims to mobilise that research into action and highlights important steps that can be taken by beekeepers, conservationists, and anyone else with an interest in helping bumblebees, to lessen any potential negative impacts of managed honeybees.
Q2. Is all beekeeping bad for wild bees?
No. The message is not that beekeeping is bad, and it’s definitely not something we want to avoid or prevent. Our aim with this statement is to help inform people of best practice and encourage responsible beekeeping and well-thought-out hive placement. Keeping honeybees is important economically for honey and wax production, and for pollination of some crops and wild plants, as well as being firmly embedded in our culture. Several of the Trust’s staff and supporters are beekeepers, and are also some of the biggest advocates for wild bee conservation. The important bit is finding the middle ground that balances wild bee conservation and beekeeping, and making sure that rare wild bees aren’t inadvertently harmed.
Q3. What are the main recommendations?
The main recommendation is to take a precautionary approach to how we do beekeeping so that we do not accidentally end up causing problems for our wild pollinator communities. Five specific recommendations are made in the statement which outline how the precautionary principle can be applied in practice.
The position statement is available here.