With a
little knowhow, balconies, doorsteps and window boxes can all be turned into
wildlife havens
Kate
Bradbury
Sat 22
Jun 2019 11.00 BSTFirst published on Sat 15 Jun
2019 11.00 BST
Last
year’s extreme weather meant a tough year for many of
the UK’s bees, and conservationists are concerned that could
have a knock-on effect this year and beyond. According to a report from the
Bumblebee Conservation Trust, they could face long-term problems from future
heatwaves. But we can give them a helping hand.
You don’t
need to keep honeybees to help bees – in fact, a 2018
study commissioned by Cambridge University suggests that this
can harm wild bees. It’s thought that the more bees there are in an area, the
more competition there is for nectar and pollen; if every shopping centre has
three or four hives on the roof, what does that mean for the wild bees?
It would
be easy to assume that our built-up towns and cities are deserts for
pollinators. Yet among the grey is also green: parks, gardens, balconies,
doorsteps and window boxes, each with the potential to feed a
city of bees. In fact, urban spaces can, in some instances, be
better for bees and other pollinators than the countryside, where
wildlife has
largely been pushed outto make space for more crops and livestock.
Gardens and parks are home to a greater variety of flowering plants than in the
wild, and for a longer season, too. What’s more, we’re less likely to use
pesticides in them, enabling bees and other pollinators to feed safely.
Indeed, a study
published last summer in the journal Proceedings Of The Royal
Society B found that bumblebee
colonies in urban areas were actually stronger than those in the wild.
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