Help give homes to bumblebees with the BeeBox


Jenny Roberts and Philip Donkersley with the BeeBox
Jenny Roberts and Philip Donkersley with the BeeBox

Wildlife lovers can help provide much needed homes for Britain’s iconic bumblebees thanks to the innovative new BeeBox, created and developed by researchers at Lancaster University.

In much the same way that bird boxes help provide birds with ideal nesting spots, the newly launched BeeBox will enable people to provide ideal homes for bumblebee colonies.

The humble bumble bee is a vital pollinator species. They pollinate many of our flowers and they are also important for pollinating crops.

In recent years there has been an increase in public awareness about the need to support our pollinators by planting more bee-friendly flowers for foraging – but this addresses only half the problem.

Dr Philip Donkersley, an environmental scientist and invertebrate expert at Lancaster University, had the idea for the BeeBox after recognising the need for more bumblebee nesting sites.

“The BeeBoxes provide the missing half of bee ‘Bed and Breakfast’. One of my biggest bugbears about bee conservation is that we are always planting more food for them, which is great, but rarely doing any work on providing nesting sites for wild bees.

“Finding suitable habitat and in particular nesting sites can be an issue for bumblebee queens in the spring. These bee boxes can help to address that for both rural and urban areas.”

The BeeBox has been through five years of development to perfect the design.

Dr Donkersley teamed up with Jenny Roberts, a lecturer in Mechanical Engineering at Lancaster University to develop the BeeBox with the support of Impact Acceleration Account funding from both the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

Informed through Philip’s extensive scientific knowledge about bumblebee nesting behaviours and preferences, as well as testing several versions of prototypes in field trials, Jenny’s design has resulted in a 3D printed nest using sustainable and biodegradable wood-fibre materials.

About the size of half a football, the structure of the dome shaped BeeBox incorporates cavity wall insulation principles to help regulate temperature within the nest to keep it from getting too hot or cold.

The pair believe they have developed a bee nesting box that is based on a truly scientific understanding of the actual nesting needs of Bumble Bees.

Jenny said: “Using 3D printing and moulding, we initially created a light-proof chamber with a small narrow entrance pipe. Once buried beneath ground, the prototype dome-shaped nests quickly proved to be popular with queen bees on the hunt for a safe place for a nest.

“It’s the first bumblebee nest box, to our knowledge, that has been scientifically developed. Following several iterations, we have determined the optimum internal cavity size, focused on creating a homeostatic internal environment, and it’s additively manufactured, so very efficient in material usage and reduces material waste.

“It was really important for us to use wholly biodegradable materials to ensure sustainability, and we needed the design to be strong and robust to withstand the elements and offer a safe potential nesting site. It has been designed to be resistant to predators, such as badgers, as well as curious livestock if used on grazing land.”

Philip said: “From a scientific point of view, bumblebee nesting habits are relatively understudied. We took what information we already know about bumblebee nests, such as complete darkness, limited entrances, their use of former mouse nests, and combined this with testing variants on our design that 3D printing allows us to do rapidly. We’ve ended up with a design based on what we know bumblebees need and want.”

Bumblebee colonies are typically 50-100 individuals. Towards the end of the year, they’ll produce 5-10 new queens, who will fly off, mate with male bumblebees, and then hibernate until March-April. All the big bees you see flying around in spring are last year’s queens who have survived winter.

Philip says bumblebees are safe to invite into our gardens.

“Bumblebees aren’t like honeybees – they are very gentle and safe to be around. There’s actually a good evolutionary reason for this. Bumblebees live in much smaller colonies than honeybees - 50 vs 50,000. Honeybees can afford to expend a few hundred workers defending the hive, they can sting you and still have thousands of sisters left to keep on foraging. Bumblebees can’t afford to do this, if they die defending the hive, that’s a proportionally bigger loss of workers.”

Jenny said: “I’m not a bee expert but have been around bumblebees quite a lot now during the testing of Beebox. I’ve not been stung once or even felt threatened by them. Bumblebees are very friendly and aren’t aggressive. Therefore, providing you don’t disturb them they will live quite happily in your garden without bothering you.”

The ‘BeeBox’ nest box for bumblebees are now available on sale for the general public to purchase through Lancaster University’s website. They cost £60 and are being made to order.

People can find out more, or register their interest to purchase a BeeBox for their own gardens, by following the link here: BeeBox - Lancaster UniversityBeeBox

BeeBox

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