A Sting in the Tale

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A Sting in the Tale Page 26

by Dave Goulson


  30. Some plants, such as the bird’s-nest orchid, are entirely parasitic, gaining all their nutrients from other plants. They have no need for chlorophyll since they do not bother to photosynthesise themselves, and so are usually an anaemic pale brown in colour. Yellow rattle and its relatives are described as hemiparasitic because they have a mix-and-match strategy; they do make their own energy via photosynthesis and so they need green leaves, but they also steal nutrients from other plants when they can.

  31. These spectacular insects normally hang around the tops of oak trees, and so are seldom seen. One old-fashioned technique that was used by butterfly collectors was to place a well-rotted dead rat on a woodland ride. Beautiful though the butterflies are, they have a macabre taste for the juices that leak from such a corpse and are often lured down.

  Chapter 16. A Charity Just for Bumblebees

  32. Twenty-seven species have been described from the UK, but the cryptic bumblebee was not discovered here until very recently, and the tree bumblebee did not arrive until 2001.

  33. In truth the apple bumblebee may never have been resident in the UK. It is known only from four specimens, captured by one Frederick Smith and his son Edward on the dunes near Deal in Kent in about 1865. Smith was a highly experienced entomologist who worked at the British Museum, so the record is likely to be genuine, but none have been recorded since.

  34. Charles Darwin experienced this phenomenon first-hand. The Darwin and Wedgwood families intermarried repeatedly over four generations, with Darwin marrying his cousin Emma. They had ten children, three of whom died early in life and three more of whom never had children of their own. It is likely that the taboos against marriage between relatives, which are widespread in human societies, came about to prevent such instances.

  35. I must immediately apologise for this shockingly stereotypical portrayal of a farmer. Of course they are not all male or from Somerset, except in my head. Dumbledore, you may have gathered, is the old English name for bumblebee, possibly originating in Somerset or Sussex.

  36. This book, by Oliver Prys-Jones and Sarah Corbet, is a great little introduction to British bumblebees, with a good identification guide, distribution maps and lots of drawings and pictures.

  37. This reminds me of my favourite adage, from an old home winemaking recipe book: ‘Five gallons are as easy to make as one, and last nearly twice as long.’

  Chapter 17. Return of the Queen

  38. Strangely, the old-fashioned hair curlers, plastic open-ended cylinders with lots of small holes and protruding nobbles on the sides, are perfect for temporary storage of bumblebee queens. Each hair curler is stoppered at both ends with the queen inside, and then they can be packed together with dental wadding between them, the latter soaked in sugar solution. So long as they are kept cool, queens can survive for a week or so like this, occasionally poking their tongues into the dental wadding for a refreshing drink.

  39. Hedgehogs in New Zealand provide a neat example. They were introduced before bumblebees in small numbers, and the resulting inbreeding has led to them having unappealingly malformed teeth. Nonetheless, in the absence of competitors they survive very well, and have made an enormous nuisance of themselves. Even with their sub-standard dentition they cheerfully and effectively consume the eggs of endangered birds such as the black stilt and black-fronted tern. One hedgehog was found to contain 283 weta legs; these are fearsome-looking mouse-sized crickets, found only in New Zealand, which are rapidly heading towards extinction thanks to our prickly friends and other introduced enemies.

  APPENDIX

  Common and Latin Names of British Bumblebees

  Some of my fellow scientists may be a little annoyed by my persistent use of common names for bumblebee species. This is frowned upon as it can lead to confusion: different common names are used in different countries, and sometimes multiple common names may be in use. On the other hand, a blizzard of Latin names can be rather off-putting. Below are the formal Latin names and English names of the British bumblebee species. The English name for the cryptic bumblebee I made up, but it seems a logical translation of the Latin, and appropriate enough for a bee that can be distinguished from other species only by examining its DNA.

  Bombus barbutellus

  Barbut’s cuckoo bumblebee

  Bombus bohemicus

  Gypsy cuckoo bumblebee

  Bombus campestris

  Field cuckoo bumblebee

  Bombus cryptarum

  Cryptic bumblebee

  Bombus cullumanus

  Cullem’s bumblebee

  Bombus distinguendus

  Great yellow bumblebee

  Bombus hortorum

  Garden bumblebee

  Bombus humilis

  Brown-banded carder bumblebee

  Bombus hypnorum

  Tree bumblebee

  Bombus jonellus

  Heath bumblebee

  Bombus lapidarius

  Red-tailed bumblebee

  Bombus lucorum

  White-tailed bumblebee

  Bombus magnus

  Northern white-tailed bumblebee

  Bombus monticola

  Bilberry bumblebee (blaeberry bumblebee in Scotland)

  Bombus muscorum

  Moss carder bumblebee

  Bombus pascuorum

  Common carder bumblebee

  Bombus pomorum

  Apple bumblebee

  Bombus pratorum

  Early bumblebee

  Bombus ruderarius

  Red-shanked carder bumblebee

  Bombus ruderatus

  Ruderal bumblebee or large garden bumblebee

  Bombus rupestris

  Hill cuckoo bumblebee

  Bombus soroeensis

  Broken-belted bumblebee

  Bombus subterraneus

  Short-haired bumblebee

  Bombus sylvarum

  Shrill carder bumblebee

  Bombus sylvestris

  Forest cuckoo bumblebee

  Bombus terrestris

  Buff-tailed bumblebee

  Bombus vestalis

  Southern cuckoo bumblebee or vestal cuckoo bumblebee

  Acknowledgements

  Particular thanks are due to my agent Patrick Walsh for his support and encouragement, and to Ellen Rotheray and Kirsty Park, my first and best reviewers. I’d also like to thank all of my research collaborators and my students for their ideas and enthusiasm, and to ask their forgiveness for any inaccuracies in my recall of events. Thanks are also due to my wife, Lara, and our three lovely boys, who somehow put up with my considerable eccentricities.

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Alcock, John

  amber

  Amin, Ruhul

  ant

  Angraecum sesquipedale

  Antherophagus nigricornis

  Apicystis bombi

  Apoidea

  apple

  apple bumblebee

  aquilegia

  Arctic

  Australia

  badger

  Baker, Barbara

  Banks, Brian

  bee-eater

  beewalks

  beewolf

  Belgium

  bilberry bumblebee

  bird’s-foot trefoil

  bird’s-nest orchid

  Bombus dahlbomii

  Bombus deuteronymous

  Bombus franklini

  Bombus hyperboreus

  Bombus hypocrita

  Bombus melanopoda

  Bombus niveatus

  Bombus polaris

  Bombus rubriventris

  Bombus wilmattae

  borage

  Braconidae

  Brown, Mark

  brown-banded carder bumblebee

  Buckland, Fran
k

  buddleia

  buff-tailed bumblebee

  Bumblebee Conservation Trust

  burnet moth

  butterfly

  campion

  Casey, Leanne

  cat

  catmint

  Cederberg, Bjorn

  Charente

  China

  Chittka, Lars

  chives

  Christchurch, New Zealand

  cinnabar moth

  clover ley

  Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD)

  comfrey

  commercial bumblebees

  common carder bumblebee

  Conopidae

  courtship

  cowslip

  cow-wheat

  Cretaceous

  cricket

  Crithidia bombi

  cuckoo bumblebee

  Cullem’s bumblebee

  dandelion

  Darvill, Ben

  Darwin, Charles

  Dawson, Bob

  De Jonghe, Roland

  Defence Animals Centre

  dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)

  Dickinson, Emily

  dinosaur

  diseases

  DNA fingerprinting

  Donovan, Barry

  dragonfly

  drifting

  Dungeness

  Durrell, Gerald

  early bumblebee

  echidna

  Edwards, Mike

  Ellington, Charles

  Ellis, Ciaran

  Ellis, Jon

  Eltz, Thomas

  England, Bridget

  evolution

  eyebright

  Feltham Hannah

  Fereday R. W.

  fertilizer

  flower colour preferences

  foraging behaviour

  Ford, E. B.

  forest cuckoo bumblebee

  fox

  foxglove

  France

  Gammans, Nikki

  garden bumblebee

  garden

  gorse

  Grantz, Gerald J.

  Graystock, Pete

  great tits

  great yellow bumblebee

  Hadza

  Hanley, Mick

  haploid

  harmonic radar

  Harrison-Cripps, Jennifer

  hawk moth

  hay meadow

  heath bumblebee

  Hebrides

  hedgehog

  hedgerow

  Heinrich, Bernd

  hemiparasite

  hibernation

  Himalayas

  Hitler, Adolf

  Holland

  hollyhock

  homing

  honey

  honeybee

  Hopkins, Tony

  horse chestnut

  hoverfly

  Hughes, Bill

  hummingbird

  huntsman

  Huxley, Thomas

  hybrid

  hydrocarbon

  Hymenoptera

  inbreeding

  Independent

  intensification, farming

  Japan

  Kells, Andrea

  Kent

  kestrel

  kiwi fruit

  knapweed

  Knight, Mairi

  landmark

  larvae

  lavender

  Lee, Paul

  legumes

  Leopold, Aldo

  Leverhulme Trust

  Lopez-Vaamonde, Carlos

  Lubbock, John

  lungwort

  lupin

  Lye, Gillian

  machair

  Martin, Andrew

  mating

  McCarthy, Mike

  mice

  mimicry

  mink

  mite

  moss carder bumblebee

  moth

  Mutilidae

  nectar

  Nevada bumblebee

  New Zealand

  Newman, H.

  nitrogen fixation

  North America

  Nosema bombi

  O’Connor, Steph

  oilseed rape

  O’Neill, Kevin

  Oronsay

  Osborne, Juliet

  owl

  parasites

  parrot

  Patterson’s curse

  Peat, James

  Penado, Andreia

  Perthshire

  pesticide

  pheromone

  pig, beer-drinking

  pigeon

  pollen

  pollination

  pooter

  predators

  protozoa

  Ptacek, Vladimír

  pussy willow

  Pywell, Richard

  quail

  rabbit

  Rayner, Pippa

  red bartsia

  red-belted bumblebee

  red clover

  Redpath, Nicky

  red-shanked carder bumblebee

  redstart

  red-tailed bumblebee

  Reid, Rosemary

  reintroduction

  Rhizobium

  rhododendron

  robber fly

  root nodule

  Romney Marsh

  rosemary

  Rothamsted Research

  Rotheray, Ellie

  Royal Society for the Protection of Birds

  ruderal bumblebee

  sage

  Salisbury Plain

  Sangster, Liz

  Sarcophagidae

  scabious

  Schmid-Hempel, Paul

  Sears, Jane

  Sheppard, David

  short-haired bumblebee

  shrike

  shrill carder bumblebee

  Shropshire

  Sladen, Frederick

  smelly footprints

  Smout, Anne-Marie

  sniffer dog

  social behaviour

  Somerset Levels

  South America

  Southampton

  southern cuckoo bumblebee

  Southern, Lucy

  Spaethe, Johannes

  Sparrow, Kate

  Sphecidae

  sperm plug

  sperm

  Sphaerularia bombi

  spider

  SS Aorangi

  SS Tongariro

  St John’s wort

  stag beetle

  stingless bee

  Stirling

  Stout, Jane

  sugaring

  swallowtail butterfly

  Swift, Jonathan

  Tasmania

  Tasmanian devil

  taxidermy

  Tekapo, New Zealand

  territoriality

  thermocouple

  thermoregulation

  thyme

  Toby the sniffer dog

  tomatoes

  tongue

  tracheal mite

  tree bumblebee

  Twizel New Zealand

  Uintatherium

  usurping

  Varroa

  velvet ant

  viper’s bugloss

  virus

  voles

  Volucella bombylans

  wasp

  Waters, Joe

  Watkins & Doncaster

  wax moth

  weed

  weta

  white clover

  Whitehorn, Penelope

  white-tailed bumblebee

  Wicken Fen

  Wilson, E. O.

  Woodall, Lucy

  yellow rattle

  Young, Jill

  About the Author

  DAVE GOULSON studied biology at Oxford University and is now a professor of biological sciences at the University of Sussex. He founded the Bumblebee Conservation Trust in 2006, whose groundbreaking conservation work won him the Heritage Lottery Award for Best Environmental Project and the Social Innovator of the Year Award from the Biology and Biotechnology Research Council in 2010.
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br />   A STING IN THE TALE. Copyright © 2013 by Dave Goulson. All rights reserved. For information, address Picador, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

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  “Eric the Half a Bee.” Words and Music by John Cleese and Eric Idle © 1970. Reproduced by permission of EMI Virgin Music Ltd.

  ISBN 978-1-250-04837-0 (hardcover)

  ISBN 978-1-250-04838-7 (e-book)

  Originally published in Great Britain by Jonathan Cape, a division of Random House Group Limited

  First U.S. Edition: May 2014

  eISBN 9781250048387

  First eBook edition: March 2014

 

 

 


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