Help bees thrive this annual Bees' Needs Week

Date published: 14 July 2020


This week is the fifth annual Bees’ Needs Week, highlighting what you can do at home to help our favourite pollinators.

Bees’ Needs Week (13-19 July) is about celebrating the fact that everyone can get involved by leaving patches of garden to grow wild, growing more flowers, cutting grass less, not disturbing insect nests, and carefully considering how we use pesticides.

Bees and other pollinators play a crucial role in food production and agriculture: they contribute the equivalent of more than £500 million a year to UK agriculture and food production, by improving crop quality and quantity, and are also vital to our wider, natural ecosystems.

The Coronavirus pandemic has provided an opportunity for being in nature and according to Natural England’s People and Nature Survey for England, 60% of adults in England said that they had spent time outside in green and natural spaces in the previous two weeks.

 

A bumblebee on a wildflower

 

These spaces are vital homes for our insect pollinators, of which there are thousands of species in the UK, including moths and butterflies as well as our beloved honeybees, bumblebees and many solitary bees, which are most efficient at pollinating.

However, their populations are under threat from risks such as habitat loss and fragmentation, invasive species, pests and disease, climate change and pesticide use.

Co-ordinated by Defra, Bees’ Needs Week 2020 will see Defra and many other organisations working together to encourage everyone who can to do simple things at home - like growing more flowers and cutting grass less often - to help our precious pollinators thrive, and to engage further with nature through citizen science initiatives such as the Pollinator Monitoring Scheme’s (PoMS) insect counts.

 

 A buff-tailed (Bombus terrestris) bumblebee

 

Natural England Chair, Tony Juniper said: “Bees may be small, but they have a huge impact on how our world works.

“These wonderful insects are a kind of natural glue, holding the environment together by moving pollen between plants, enabling whole systems to be sustained and replenished.

“Without bees, we could not live.

“Although overall the status of pollinators has declined, the good news is that everyone can do something to help. Many of us have been more connected with nature during the pandemic lockdown and I very much hope that this newly-found reverence for our environment can be harnessed to ensure pollinators’ habitats, populations and products are protected for the future.”

Whether you are a farmer, a gardener, or a land manager, there is something you can do to help support our valuable insect pollinators.

 

Red-tailed bumblebee on a wildflower

 

Here are five simple actions you can take to help pollinators and make sure their populations are sustained:

  1. Grow more flowers, shrubs and trees
  2. Let your garden grow wild
  3. Cut your grass less often
  4. Don’t disturb insect nest and hibernation spots
  5. Think carefully about whether to use pesticides

Another way you can help is by monitoring your local bee and pollinator populations. Spend 10 minutes in the sun to count insects for the UK’s Pollinator Monitoring Scheme (PoMS), and get involved on social media using #beesneeds

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