World Bee Day: Build ‘motorway services for bees’, urges bug expert

Bees need to migrate to protect populations, but are struggling to reach safety

Samuel Webb
Friday 20 May 2022 06:31 EDT
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British bee populations are in steep decline
British bee populations are in steep decline (PA Archive)

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A bee expert is urging nature lovers to create ‘motorway service stations’ for bees in their gardens and window boxes.

British bees have suffered badly over the past fifty or so years due to changes in land use as a result of modern farming methods, urban spread, and expanding transport infrastructure.

There has been a 60 per cent reduction in bee numbers since 2004, and one of the major factors in that loss is that bees struggle to travel to other habitable areas – which is vital for their survival.

Paul Hetherington is a campaigner at invertebrate conservation charity Buglife, which is behind the B-Lines project to create a series of ‘insect pathways’ running through our countryside and towns.

He says planting bee-friendly flowers in gardens allows bees to fuel up when they migrate – similar to motorway services.

“Anyone can get involved, even if it’s just a window box,” Paul said. “If you have more land you can turn your lawn into a meadow.”

Paul Hetherington is a campaigner at invertebrate conservation charity Buglife
Paul Hetherington is a campaigner at invertebrate conservation charity Buglife (Buglife)

In the UK, pollinating insects are worth around £690m to the economy every year, according to a study by the University of Reading.

But they are dying. Massive declines in numbers are underway, largely due to human activity.

In January, a global study found that since 1990, a quarter of all bee species known to science – totalling around 20,000 – have not been seen, despite improvements and expansions in monitoring efforts.

And this year, the UK government said it will allow the usage of neonicotinoid pesticides, the use of which have been linked to collapses of pollinator populations, and are banned in the European Union.

Mr Hetherington added: “We’re looking at a very bleak picture. They are trapped in isolated pockets which puts them at risk if something catastrophic happens.”

Advice on the best flowers to plant to help bees can be found on the RHS website here.

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