...and smiling!
More used, as I am, to being on the other side of the camera, we were giving our best beaming smiles last week...
Why? Because the flowers are beautiful in the annual meadow strip at Middleton Park...
..and because we have now finished all fieldwork for this season!
That's actually something of a shame, as being out and about, and seeing the natural world in all its glory, is definitely the biggest perk of a job like this :)
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
Nectar robbers caught red-handed on allotment site
We always think bumblebees are cute and fluffy and help
pollinate our plants in return for food (pollen and nectar). Most bumblebees
are really doing what we expect them to do, but some have a darker side: they
take the food (in this case nectar) without doing any pollination. This
behaviour is called nectar robbing.
The culprits are often the buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) and the white-tailed bumblebee (Bombus lucorum). They are short-tongue bumblebees and therefore lack the morphological adaptations to access flowers which have the nectar hidden at the base of a long tubular flower, which would normally only be accessible to long-tongue bumblebees.
But the aforementioned two species have found
a way around this problem. They bite a hole into the flower tube near its base,
i.e. where the nectar is located, and sip the nectar trough this hole. Once a
hole is created other bumblebees may use it as well, and this is called
secondary nectar robbing. As these bumblebees don`t access the flower in the
normal way they do not take up any
pollen and thus do not get involved in pollination.
Nectar robbing bumblebee. The holes at the base of the flower are clearly visible. |
We have watched Bombus terrestris and B. lucorum
robbing nectar from comfrey flowers (Symphytum
officinalis) at an allotment site (see two pictures below). Nearly every single
flower had one or more holes and the bumblebees were busy flying from one
flower to the next sipping nectar through the hole. We have not seen a single
long-tongue bumblebee accessing the flowers in the normal way. Pollination of
the comfrey flowers cannot be really high, but luckily comfrey is partly self-fertile
so doesn`t really need the bumblebees to distribute pollen from one flower to
the next.
Have a look yourself, comfrey is still
flowering and perhaps you will spot the little nectar thieves at work on a
sunny day.
Thursday, 20 September 2012
An excuse for gratuitous flower and pollinator photos…
It's
the end of our summer of insect and flower surveys now and we thought it would
be a good time to showcase some of the flowers and insects we've happened upon
along the way. So, each of us in the Reading team have put forward our
favourite flowers and insects that we've encountered over the way. The flowers
weren't ones that were particularly rare - or indeed - even native. But
each of us has a favourite and here we explain why!
Nadine's
favourite flower is the sunflower (Helianthus
annuus) and favourite insect is the rose chafer (Cetonia aurata):
"It
always cheers me up if I see a sunflower (see picture below). They are tall and impressive plants
with huge flower heads and so easy to grow. Bees like them too and the seeds
are loved by birds in winter (most of the time eaten up well before winter
arrives).”
“The
rose chafer beetle (picture below) is a really good looking beetle, quite big, all metallic
green and not shy at all. We have seen these beetles quite a lot in June and
July enjoying Spiraea and hogweed flowers."
Peter's
favourite flower is the california poppy (Eschscholzia californica) and top insect was the hornet hoverfly (Volucella zonaria):
"California
poppies (picture below with Peter in the background) have a nice bright orange colour (which is not a very common flower colour) and they
seem to glow even when we have a gloomy day. They are loved by pollinators and
it is a joy to photograph them in different angles. “
“The
hornet hoverflies (see picture below) we have seen in August were a great find and the first time I
have seen them. They are impressive hoverflies and have a very interesting
lifestyle (see our August blog “Meet the hornet hoverfly”). I also like all the
other hoverflies but the hornet hoverfly was the nicest one so far."
Sam's
favourite flower is the orange hawkweed (Pilosella
aurantiaca) and favourite insect was (unsurprisingly) the early bumblebee (Bombus pratorum) (see our June blog:
"Charismatic MICRO fauna"!):
"We
only encountered this bright Composite (picture below) in one allotment and on the edge of a
pavement on the way to a park that we surveyed. The flower has the most
incredible orange colour - it’s unlike any of the yellow Composites and really
stands out. It is a deep orange in the centre - almost red and has the
most amazing scent of honey. Although this is a well-known garden plant
(sometimes a bit weedy) we never actually encountered it within one of our
transect survey walks.
"My
favourite insect has to be the tiny bumble Bombus pratorum (in the picture below enjoying Oreganum flowers). I
blogged about this bee earlier in the season and I shamelessly maintain that it
is the cutest bumblebee we have encountered!"
There
you have it - our gratuitous, subjective, and distinctly unscientific blog for
the week. Enjoy!
Tuesday, 18 September 2012
Reading Flower Meadows in September 2012
As promised here comes an update on the progress of the Reading flower meadows.
Annual meadows:
The annual meadows still look beautiful and some of the meadows really came into their own in the last weeks with lots of flowers providing a much needed food source for pollinators this late in the year and it also gives us something nice and colourful to look at. All 5 annual meadows have a different character and consist of a slightly different mix of species flowering.
The meadow in Caversham Crematorium (see below) is dominated by poppies and you can also see quite a lot of pot marigold (Calendula) now .
Christchurch Meadows has an annual meadow which looks very beautiful now (after a slow start) with lots of Cosmidium and Cosmos flowering (see below).
The meadow in Victoria Recreation Ground (Tilehurst) is probably the most colourful of the 5 annual meadows and full of poppies, cornflowers, pot marigold, Cosmos, Cosmidium and red flax (see below).
Prospect Park has a golden meadow with mainly Cosmidium flowering interspersed with some Cosmos (see below).
Finally the meadow in Rabson Recreation Ground has, after a flush of poppies in August, a nice mix of pot marigold, red flax, cornflowers and Cosmos flowering (see below).
Also the pollinators seem to enjoy the annual meadows. All meadows were alive with bees, hoverflies, bumblebees (like the one on the Cosmos in Rabson Recreation Ground in the picture below) and other pollinators.
Perennial meadows
The perennial meadows are all cut now and you will not see a lot at the moment. But all 5 perennial meadows have quite a good mix of perennial plants like ox-eye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare), yarrow (Achillea millefolium), knapweeds (Centaurea sp.), musk mallow (Malva moschata), birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculata), wild carrot (Daucus carota) and more. You can look forward to seeing all of the perennial meadows in flower next year which will hopefully bring a nice change from the closely mown grass you will usually find in our parks.
This will probably be the last update on the progress of the Reading flower meadows for this year (we will start again next year when we find the first flowers in the meadows). If you have not seen the meadows for yourself so far, make the most of the nice autumn days we have at the moment and have a look, there is still time.
Annual meadows:
The annual meadows still look beautiful and some of the meadows really came into their own in the last weeks with lots of flowers providing a much needed food source for pollinators this late in the year and it also gives us something nice and colourful to look at. All 5 annual meadows have a different character and consist of a slightly different mix of species flowering.
The meadow in Caversham Crematorium (see below) is dominated by poppies and you can also see quite a lot of pot marigold (Calendula) now .
Christchurch Meadows has an annual meadow which looks very beautiful now (after a slow start) with lots of Cosmidium and Cosmos flowering (see below).
The meadow in Victoria Recreation Ground (Tilehurst) is probably the most colourful of the 5 annual meadows and full of poppies, cornflowers, pot marigold, Cosmos, Cosmidium and red flax (see below).
Prospect Park has a golden meadow with mainly Cosmidium flowering interspersed with some Cosmos (see below).
Finally the meadow in Rabson Recreation Ground has, after a flush of poppies in August, a nice mix of pot marigold, red flax, cornflowers and Cosmos flowering (see below).
Also the pollinators seem to enjoy the annual meadows. All meadows were alive with bees, hoverflies, bumblebees (like the one on the Cosmos in Rabson Recreation Ground in the picture below) and other pollinators.
Perennial meadows
The perennial meadows are all cut now and you will not see a lot at the moment. But all 5 perennial meadows have quite a good mix of perennial plants like ox-eye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare), yarrow (Achillea millefolium), knapweeds (Centaurea sp.), musk mallow (Malva moschata), birdsfoot trefoil (Lotus corniculata), wild carrot (Daucus carota) and more. You can look forward to seeing all of the perennial meadows in flower next year which will hopefully bring a nice change from the closely mown grass you will usually find in our parks.
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
Bee and Pollination Festival at Bristol University Botanic Gardens
The
weekend of the 9th September was warm and breezy – perfect for the
Pollination Festival hosted at Bristol University Botanic Gardens. Clare and
Ben from the Bristol Urban team were present to explain the project and
recommend bee-friendly plants and share out information on anything pollinator
related, to the best flowers for pollinators at certain times (Royal Horticultural Society plant list) to the lifecycles of
bumblebees and how they differ to honeybees. The Bristol public were fascinated
by the amount of insects we had found across the city, and many spoke of their
delight with the urban wildflower meadows planted for the next year of this
project. No doubt more astonishment will be had when the perennial margins come
to the fore!
Clare and Ben at the colourful Urban Pollinator stand at the Bee and Pollination Festival at the Bristol University Botanic Gardens |
The
event – spendidly organised by volunteer Alice Maltby and garden curator Nick
Wray – attracted huge numbers of people ranging in age, gardening experience,
and love of honey-based products! Other stalls included charity Bees for Development,
the Bumblebee Conservation Trust,
the Bristol City Council allotment department, and botanical drawing and
paintings by local artist Jenny Brooks.
We had a wonderful time this weekend talking to the engaged
and informed people of Bristol. We would like to thank everyone for coming and
showing much interest in our project, and we would like to thank Alice and Nick
for inviting us to take part.
An allotment fit for bees
We write a lot on this blog about allotments, but it is
becoming clear that these are probably our best urban habitats for insect
pollinators after gardens. Sampling last week, the Reading team visited
an allotment that was practically leaking flowers it was so densely
planted. The site was humming with bees
- even this late in the season. The
typical allotment vegetables were interspersed with dozens of bright blooms - planted
simply to provide forage for bees.
Ina and Malcom on their pollinator friendly allotment plot |
The allotment keepers Ina and Malcolm watched amused as
we proceeded to count each and every single flower in our square metre quadrats
that were positioned every four metres along the edge of their plot. After that exhaustive exercise we strolled
alongside their plot catching bumblebee after bumblebee! Even in the height
of summer we would struggle to capture as many bees as we found on this single
plot so late in the season.
The Reading team discusses insect conservation with the allotment holders |
Peter catching a pollinator |
Pollinator put in a tube to be identified at University |
Allotments are phenomenally hard work to keep productive,
and rainy weather, armies of slugs, green fly, cabbage white caterpillars and
weevils will do their best to unravel all your hard work. So, although we wish
every allotment was as well-tended and wildlife-friendly as this one, its
important to note that simply growing your vegetables on such a site will benefit
the insects we all rely on.
These flowers were sown to attract pollinators to the allotment site |
Monday, 10 September 2012
The Hornet Hoverfly and the Hornets
In August we reported about the hornet hoverfly (Volucella zonaria) and its interesting life history (see here for the blog entry: http://www.urbanpollinators.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/meet-hornet-hoverfly-volucella-zonaria.html).
In short, the female hornet hoverfly will seek out a wasp or hornet nest to lay its eggs in the nest. The hoverfly larvae develop in the nest and eat the detritus (dead or dying hornets and larvae). Today we witnessed the hornet hoverfly behaviour of seeking out a hornet nest to lay its eggs first-hand on an allotment site in Reading.
On the allotment site an allotment plot holder told us about a bee nest near his allotment plot. When we had a look it turned out to be a hornet nest with hornets buzzing in and out of the entrance to the nest in an old compost heap.We watched the hornets flying in and out for a while before we discovered a female hornet hoverfly (easy to recognize as it has the eyes separated with a wide yellow band) sitting on a nettle leave near the entrance.
After sitting there for a while the hornet hoverfly started to creep closer ...
... and closer ...
... until it was right near the entrance of the hornet nest with the hornets flying past it in and out of the nest (you can see the hornet hoverfly sitting on the left in the picture above, a hornet flying to the nest entrance on the right). The hornet hoverfly sat there for a while, watching the hornets flying past, then it started to fly towards the nest entrance, sneaking past the angry looking hornets at the entrance (see picture below) and disappeared in the hornet nest. The hornets seemed not to notice the hoverfly at all and just continued flying in and out.
We found it amazing to watch this hornet hoverfly behaviour first-hand after we read about it in a book and on the internet. Allotment sites are always good for a surprise.
In short, the female hornet hoverfly will seek out a wasp or hornet nest to lay its eggs in the nest. The hoverfly larvae develop in the nest and eat the detritus (dead or dying hornets and larvae). Today we witnessed the hornet hoverfly behaviour of seeking out a hornet nest to lay its eggs first-hand on an allotment site in Reading.
On the allotment site an allotment plot holder told us about a bee nest near his allotment plot. When we had a look it turned out to be a hornet nest with hornets buzzing in and out of the entrance to the nest in an old compost heap.We watched the hornets flying in and out for a while before we discovered a female hornet hoverfly (easy to recognize as it has the eyes separated with a wide yellow band) sitting on a nettle leave near the entrance.
... and closer ...
... until it was right near the entrance of the hornet nest with the hornets flying past it in and out of the nest (you can see the hornet hoverfly sitting on the left in the picture above, a hornet flying to the nest entrance on the right). The hornet hoverfly sat there for a while, watching the hornets flying past, then it started to fly towards the nest entrance, sneaking past the angry looking hornets at the entrance (see picture below) and disappeared in the hornet nest. The hornets seemed not to notice the hoverfly at all and just continued flying in and out.
We found it amazing to watch this hornet hoverfly behaviour first-hand after we read about it in a book and on the internet. Allotment sites are always good for a surprise.
Thursday, 6 September 2012
Ant-bee interaction
Okay, rather a one-sided interaction, if I'm honest! But you have to admire this little chap, in his efforts to drag a dead Bombus pascuorum back for the rest of the family - battling a headwind, and very rough terrain, as well as moving something several times his own body weight.
More on feeding preferences
We took a stroll out to check the progress of the annuals flower bed at Middleton Park - and found a glorious riot of mostly Cosmidium, glowing in the afternoon sun! This has been a really successful bed, despite a touch of patchiness in the sowing - there's been a good mix of annual flowers here for most of the summer, now, providing a good food source for local pollinators, and a splash of colour in the park.
There were hoverflies in abundance, of all shapes and sizes, dizzy with so much choice and falling in and out of one flower after another.
Interestingly, we saw few bumblebees or solitary bees, and those that there were, were managing to ignore the shiningly bright Cosmidium in favour of Autumn hawkbit hanging on around the edges.
We've been considering the question of how flowers appear different to bees, compared to how they appear to us, or other pollinators, and I'll expand on this further in a later post (it's past time to knock off for today, there's a whole lot of fieldwork to be done tomorrow!), so prepare yourselves for an investigation into bee-vision and the wonders of modern photographic method :) All very interesting, I promise you.
There were hoverflies in abundance, of all shapes and sizes, dizzy with so much choice and falling in and out of one flower after another.
Hoverfly on Cosmidium at Middleton Park, Leeds |
Interestingly, we saw few bumblebees or solitary bees, and those that there were, were managing to ignore the shiningly bright Cosmidium in favour of Autumn hawkbit hanging on around the edges.
Solitary bee on Autumn hawkbit at Middleton Park, Leeds |
We've been considering the question of how flowers appear different to bees, compared to how they appear to us, or other pollinators, and I'll expand on this further in a later post (it's past time to knock off for today, there's a whole lot of fieldwork to be done tomorrow!), so prepare yourselves for an investigation into bee-vision and the wonders of modern photographic method :) All very interesting, I promise you.
Tuesday, 4 September 2012
A taste for buddleia
One of the gardens we surveyed in south Leeds today had two buddleia bushes - one with white flowers, one with the more familiar purple flowers. There were butterflies all over this garden - it's taken a while, but they're finally starting to make a very welcome show. We spotted peacock, tortoiseshell, whites and red admirals, visiting the buddleia and mophead hydrangeas, and basking on the path in the warm sun.
The whites flitted through, scarcely stopping to sup at all; the tortoiseshells seemed to have very eclectic taste, visiting pretty much any flower in the garden. The peacocks and red admirals, however, seemed to show a marked preference for one kind of buddleia over the other - the peacocks were predominantly seen visiting the purple-flowered bush, while the red admirals gathered on the foamy white flowers of the other bush.
Butterflies enjoying the sun! |
The whites flitted through, scarcely stopping to sup at all; the tortoiseshells seemed to have very eclectic taste, visiting pretty much any flower in the garden. The peacocks and red admirals, however, seemed to show a marked preference for one kind of buddleia over the other - the peacocks were predominantly seen visiting the purple-flowered bush, while the red admirals gathered on the foamy white flowers of the other bush.
Peacock butterfly (Inachis io) on purple-flowered buddleia |
Red admirals (Vanessa atalanta) on white-flowered buddleia |
Le Mega Quadrat!
In Edinburgh the annual margins are blooming away, but accurately estimating the number of flowers is proving a little tricky as many species are patchy in their distribution. To compare various sampling strategies, Pierre - our quadrateur formidable - has designed a mega quadrat! It has so far been unleashed upon two margins and will hopefully reveal the best way to count flowers.
Sabrina and Frazer modelling the mega quadrat.
Allotments can be great places for wildlife!
We are always looking forward to sample pollinators in
allotments as this can be so much more interesting and rewarding than most of
the other urban habitats that we sample.
Walking into an allotment site is like walking into a different world: All
of a sudden, we are surrounded by flowers and vegetables, buzzing bees,
ripening fruit and the wind rustling in the leaves. We can almost forget that
we are in the middle of a busy city.
A typical allotment site in Reading |
Allotments are like green oases in a concrete desert, especially in areas without many gardens. There is a newly-found interest in allotment gardening at the moment and many people try to grow their own vegetables without pesticides which is good news for the wildlife.
Vegetables and flowers mixed together in this wildlife friendly allotment |
You can attract lots of bees to your allotment if you sow Phacelia
as a green manure and let it flower
|
Allotments are under threat as councils and private owners of allotment sites are tempted to generate income by selling off allotment land for site development. But luckily, ‘statutory' allotment sites (as opposed to ‘temporary’ allotment sites) are subject to some protection under the 1925 Allotments Act so land on which such allotments are cannot be sold off as easily.
A wildlife friendly allotment site in Tilehurst, it was amazing to see all the bees and hoverflies
visiting flowers planted along the edge and in between the vegetables
|
Let’s hope that future generations of allotment holders will
be able to enjoy allotment sites to the same extent as the current one, and
that such sites will be able to provide a lifeline for some of the wildlife to
survive in an increasingly challenging urban environment.
A wildlife paradise ... |
Borage is loved by bees and once you plant it it will seed itself around
and you never have to plant it again |
You can also watch the two allotment videos I recently made to see how my own allotment looks now and to get more ideas of how to make your plot more wildlife-friendly.