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Wildlife (16)

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Richard Jones (16)

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The first bumblebee of the year

By Richard Jones on 25/03/2009 11:38:02

The first bumblebee of the year flies past like an animated boot brush. It's a huge queen of the buff-tailed bumblebee, Bombus terrestris, looking as big as a mouse as it drones about the allotment. It comes and goes several times as we're digging


Bumblebees and climate change

By Richard Jones on 13/03/2013 13:04:46

Sapphire Class at Ivydale Primary School are now experts on bumblebees. We did a workshop on climate change so I took in a tray of bumblebee specimens and we talked about the potential consequences for these well-known and much-loved insects


Hummingbird hawkmoths and bumblebees

By Richard Jones on 27/08/2009 11:06:03

On holiday in northern France last week I was struck by the similarities in the landscape, but very subtle differences in the wildlife.With its gently rolling hills, hedges, grazing meadows, small woods, narrow lanes and winding streams, I could


Bumblebees in the compost bin

By Richard Jones on 27/05/2009 10:02:34

We have a bumblebee nest in our compost bin. I first noticed a month ago when the first few workers started coming and going. Now we have a steady stream. The bees are buff-tailed, Bombus terrestris, one of our commonest species.I've told the family


Bees at Gardeners' World Live

By Richard Jones on 12/06/2009 16:57:42

they are transformed by the arrival of tonnes of imported topsoil and a bewildering rainbow of garden plants, for Gardeners' World Live.Whilst I was there I was asked to research and create a container of plants to attract wildlife, and despite the rain, it looked


Feather-footed bee

By Richard Jones on 09/04/2008 11:57:00

plumipes is not a bumblebee (although it's about the same size), and has no commonly used English name, which is a shame because it's a characteristic and widespread garden insect. I've always described it as the 'feather-footed bee' (the Latin - plumipes


Bees and bee flies

By Richard Jones on 30/03/2011 17:38:43

the rusty-red females. And there were several specimens of the distinctive large black and ashy white Andrena cineraria.Lots of the bumblebee-like Anthophora plumipes have been darting about. The all-black females are often pursued by a posse of black


Wasps

By Richard Jones on 11/05/2011 08:04:48

start flying from late January, it is only around the beginning of May that wasps start to appear. Bumblebees, especially, are early risers — early in the day and early in the year. Their furry coats help keep them warm, when it is too sharp for many


The flies have it

By Richard Jones on 07/11/2007 09:57:49

fly, a huge bristly orange and black critter, Tachina fera. No English name for this one, despite being the size of a bumblebee. The trouble is that to merit a common name, insects have to satisfy two important criteria. First they have


Derelict gardens

By Richard Jones on 24/11/2010 11:06:35

A few weeks ago, I was rather disparaging about some gardens local to me, which are so immaculately laid out, so minimalist, and so trimmed, that they are all but devoid of wildlife. I now intend to take my anti-gardening stance further (this may


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