Bees
220301 | UK overrules scientific advice lift ban on bee-harming pesticide, Eustice not "rule out completely risk to bees"
To minimise risks to bees, George Eustice says that farmers will be forbidden from growing flowering plants for 32 months after the sugar beet crop.
220211 | Will banned bee-killing pesticides become the new norm? | Secretary of State ignoring expert advice
210210 | Bees: Britain is breaking its promise of better bee protections
This is urgent! Britain is breaking its promise of better bee protections by allowing a bee-killing poison banned in the EU to be used on our fields! read more »
200110 | George Eustice MP gives go-ahead for bee killing pesticide
10th January read more »
Grow More Trees: Autumn Seed Search | Cornwall Wildlife Trust
201007 | Grow more trees - collect acorn and other tree seeds to grow tree saplings now
Grow more trees - collect acorn and other tree seeds to grow tree saplings now
Last updated: 07/10/2020
When’s the right time to plant a tree? Twenty years ago! When’s the best time to collect acorns and other tree seeds? NOW!
200926 | It Takes Just 2 Minutes to Sow a Seed
It Takes Just 2 Minutes to Sow a Seed
September 26, 2020 1 CommentBut a whole family to plant a forest.
We need you. The planet needs you. And now is the time to act. read more »
200928 | Environmental charity 2 Minute Foundation calls on supporters to help plant a new forest 'Planting trees helps to rest
Environmental charity 2 Minute Foundation calls on supporters to help plant a new forest
'Planting trees helps to restore nature, capture carbon and create an ecosystem for insects, birds and all kinds of species to thrive in' read more »
The Forest for Cornwall (Koos rag Kernow)
Forest for Cornwall Programme
The Forest for Cornwall, conceived by Cornwall Council, is an ambitious tree planting project with the principle aim of fighting climate change.
When complete we hope it will cover approximately 8,000 hectares - that’s about 2% of Cornwall’s land area.
The Forest for Cornwall is not a single area of new forest. read more »
Bees Go Quackers!!
Scientists using highly sensitive vibration detectors have decoded honeybee queens' "tooting and quacking" duets in the hive.
Worker bees make new queens by sealing eggs inside special cells with wax and feeding them royal jelly. When ready to emerge the queens quack -but if two are free at the same time, they will fight to the death. So when one hatches, its quacks turn to toots, telling the workers to keep the queens , still quacking , captive. The queens responding to each other can be plainly heard.
It has been assumed that the queens were talking to other queens -possibly sizing one another up vocally to see who is strongest but there is another explanation.
read more »
200613 | To mow or to grow? – how halving the cut will get our town verges buzzing
191024 | New B-Lines to put the buzz back into Cornwall
New B-Lines to put the buzz back into Cornwall
An ambitious new plan for helping our bees, butterflies, hoverflies and other pollinating insects is being launched today by Buglife, the University of Exeter and Cornwall Council.
Cornwall B-Lines will create rivers of wildflowers across the countryside connecting the county’s best wildlife sites from coast to coast, and from our towns to the countryside. read more »
191028 | The Cornish bee has gone from near extinction to helping save the world
Bee friendly...
140910 | Duchy Supports Project to Save Cornish Black Honey Bees
Duchy Supports Project to Save Cornish Black Honey Bees
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
The Duchy of Cornwall is supporting a project to save the Cornish remnants of the native Black Honey Bee. read more »
130610 | Rare Cornish black honeybee found to resist colony collapse virus
Cornish Black Honey Bee (Apis mellifera mellifera or Amm)
Facts about the Cornish Black Bee read more »
The Dark Bee Apis mellifera mellifera in the United Kingdom
The Dark Bee Apis mellifera mellifera in the United Kingdom
The article below is based on a lecture given by Philip Denwood to the SICAMM Conference in Landquart, Switzerland, on 1st September 2012 read more »
190521 | Let your garden go wild to help bees and butterflies
Let your garden go wild to help bees and butterflies
I’ve always thought of my garden as rather messy, but actually, it’s pretty environmentally-friendly, with loads of daisies like this, for starters … read more »
Moss Carder Bee (Bombus muscorum)
Moss Carder Bee
Bombus muscorum read more »