Foresters create habitat in bid to save rare bee - Forestry and Land Scotland

Forestry and Land Scotland staff in the Far North have been working to grow a wide range of wildflowers that should help boost numbers of a rare species of bumblebee and boost the fortunes of other pollinating insects.

The wildflowers, being tended by North Region staff in polytunnels in Lairg, will be planted out this autumn by volunteers from the Caithness Environment Volunteer Group in two meadows at Sibster, that FLS has been developing as part of a larger effort to conserve the Great Yellow Bumblebee.

At one time recorded across the UK, the species is now restricted to the North of Scotland in flower-rich habitats, like the machair. The lack of wildflower meadows being one of the principal pressures on its survival.

Neil McInnes, FLS Forester for Caithness and Sutherland, said; “It really takes a while for a healthy meadow to get going and become well established so we’ve been working on this project for several years now. Adjusting the mix of plants is a slow, steady process. Working with Bumblebee Conservation and local ecology volunteers and tapping into the expertise of new FLS staff with horticultural industry experience has given us a great mix of skills and knowledge – from basic botany to plant propagation and species conservation – that are helping to shape and transform the two meadows. It goes to show the range of our conservation work and highlights that sometimes it’s the things that you can do at the very local level that can make all the difference in helping endangered species. Our partners will regularly monitor the meadows in the years to come and help keep a close eye on the fortunes of these particularly rare bees.”

A species project within the NatureScot led Species on the Edge Programme, the meadows are in two of several large, open areas within a forest that was planted in 2011 on a former agricultural site.

Posted On: 06/09/2023

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