Page 18 - Bumblebee Conservation Trust Buzzword magazine winter 2020
P. 18

Get carder! Managing                                                               habitats are found on sea walls, which   pollinator conservation in mind. Rotational

                                                                                                                                (different sections cut each year) and late
                                                                                         may be important corridors along which
      sea walls for scarce                                                               bumblebees can disperse. The loss of   (annual cut delayed until 15 September)
                                                                                         flower-rich habitats since the 1940s led
                                                                                                                                cutting are the main pollinator sensitive
                                                                                         to a steep decline in the distribution of
                                                                                                                                management regimes undertaken on the
      bumblebees                                                                         the Shrill carder bee until it was largely   east coast by the EA in an effort to reverse
                                                                                                                                pollinator declines.
                                                                                         restricted to a few locations along the
                                                                                         Thames Estuary (Essex and Kent).
      By Dr Tim Gardiner,           Sea walls (vegetated earth embankments) are vital    Once considered fairly widespread, the
      ecologist, poet and           engineered structures for the defence of low-lying   Moss carder bee is now primarily a coastal
                                                                                         species in the English parts of its range.
      children’s author             areas along estuaries and along the coast of the UK.   Queens usually emerge between March
                                    As strong continuous linear features in the landscape,
                                    there are over 2,000 km of sea walls in England and   and May to search for a nest site. The
                                    Wales, with the greatest length being in Essex (450   nest is built at ground level and usually
                                    km). Comprising a range of habitats, sea walls lie at   covered by moss, dry grass or leaf litter
                                    the interface between the shoreline (estuary or open   collected by the bees. This species may be
                                    sea) and terrestrial habitats such as grazing marshes or   restricted to extensive areas of flower-rich
                                    agricultural land on the landward side.              grassland in the heart of coastal grazing
                                                                                         marsh and sea walls where it forages on
                                    Sea wall flood defences support some of the richest   legumes such as red clover and bird’s foot-
                                    modern bumblebee assemblages, with 14 social         trefoil.
                                    species capable of regularly exploiting this habitat and
                                    up to 11 of these co-existing along sea banks within   As carder bee nests can persist until
                                    the Thames Estuary. This includes five UK Biodiversity   August or September, there is a need for
                                    Action Plan (UK BAP) ‘priority’ species such as the   a continuous succession of flowers from
                                    Shrill carder bee (Bombus sylvarum) and Moss carder   spring through to autumn to ensure there
                                    bee (Bombus muscorum). The Shrill carder bee needs   is a continual food supply and this includes
                                    extensive flower-rich areas and suitable nesting sites   species such as thistles for new summer
      Photos: Above: Shrill carder bee   of long tussocky grass to survive. As a late nesting   queens and males. Carder-bees, like   Photo: the landward face of a vegetated sea wall
      (Bombus sylvarum); below: folding                                                  other bumblebees, therefore benefit from   in Essex by Andy Skinner
      flowers By Tim Gardiner; Top:   and foraging species (often into September), suitable   management of a sward that maintains
      Wallasea Island by Bex Cartwright                                                                                          Further reading
                                                                                         optimum levels of flowering plants.
                                                                                                                                 Gardiner T., Pilcher R. & Wade
                                                                                         Historically, sea wall mowing regimes have   M. (2015) Sea Wall Biodiversity
                                                                                         not been favourable for the conservation   Handbook. RPS, Cambridge.
                                                                                         of rare bumblebees, where entire sea
                                                                                         walls were mown to a short sward height   www.essexfieldclub.org.uk/portal
                                                                                         (<10 cm) in midsummer (July and August).   /pSea+Wall+Biodiversity+
                                                                                         This removes available bumblebee        Handbook
                                                                                         forage plants in one event. Rare and
                                                                                         endangered bumblebee species such as
                                                                                         the Shrill carder bee are likely to continue   Follow us on:
                                                                                         to decline unless suitable flower-rich   @Bumblebeeconservationtrust
                                                                                         foraging habitats, including sea walls, are
                                                                                         sympathetically managed. Over 132 km of   @BumblebeeTrust
                                                                                         sea wall grassland in Essex is managed   @Bumblebeeconservationtrust
                                                                                         by the Environment Agency (EA) with
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