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Visit www.capy.co.uk for ant pest control solutions! Or call 01905 354549 or email help@capy.co.uk

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Bud bug pest solutions with Capybara! For help visit www.capy.co.uk or contact us via email help@capy.co.uk or 01905 354549

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Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bees. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

#Bees Head For The Hills To #Mate


We know little about bee's mating behaviour but 'hilltopping', when males and females seek mates  on the tops of hills,  has been observed before in butterflies, flies, and wasps. Professor Dave Goulson from the University of Stirling noticed large numbers of bees  in the hills near the university.  He presumed they weren't foraging but looking for mates as the hills are windswept and flowerless. However nobody seems to have told the females. Though male bumblebees from four species were found females didn't seem to be taking advantage of the gathering. 

Friday, October 28, 2011

Something For The Weekend – Seduce Me – Bees

Your weekly dose of scientifically accurate yet highly entertaining insect sex! Isabella Rossillini takes us through the social and sexual lives of bees. I get the impression that she thoroughly enjoys making these films, almost as much as I know we all enjoy watching them.
Posted by Astrojenny

For all your insect pest problems visit our web store, www.capy.co.uk

Thursday, October 27, 2011

TED Talk - Louie Schwartzberg: The Hidden Beauty Of Pollination

In this TED Talk, Filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg shares stunning high-speed images from his film "Wings of Life." Motivated by the worrying decline of the honeybee, due to Colony Collapse Disorder, his film takes us deep into the beautiful world of pollen and pollinators and the complex interaction between plants and insects. He reminds us that we depend on pollinators for a third of the fruit and vegetables we eat. We are part of nature, not separate from it.
Posted by Astrojenny

For all your insect pest problems visit our web store, www.capy.co.uk

Monday, October 24, 2011

Of Bees & Orchids

There are 25,000 species of orchids that have colonised six continents over the past 80 million years. The secret of the orchid's success lies in the weird and varied relationships each species has developed with the bees and other insects that it relies on for pollination. Most insects pollinate plants in return for a reward of nectar, not so with orchids. They cheat, trick and hoodwink insects into pollination.
Posted by Astrojenny

For all your insect pest problems visit our web store, www.capy.co.uk


Thursday, October 20, 2011

Beware! Killer Hornets!

As if our poor honeybees weren't in enough trouble. The UK is under threat of invasion by Asian hornets whose main prey are bees. These killers can destroy a bee colony in just a couple of hours. They have already spread through France and Spain and are now poised on the other side of the Channel. It's not just bees at risk either. In 2009 at least seven people were taken to hospital after being attacked in France.
Posted by Astrojenny




Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Nectar – Does One Dip Or Suck?

Flowers that are pollinated by bees have sweeter nectar than those that are pollinated by butterflies. Sweeter nectar is thicker and so it is more efficient for bees, that dip their tongue into the more viscous liquid. Butterflies on the other hand, suck nectar up through their narrow proboscis, so visit flowers with less sweet but thinner, more liquid nectar. The sugar concentration for bees is about 35% while for butterflies it is only around 20-25%.
Posted by Astrojenny

For all your insect pest problems visit our web store, www.capy.co.uk

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

BBC: Who killed the Honey Bee? UK Only

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00jzjys/Who_Killed_the_Honey_Bee/

A really interesting programme which I recommend you watch before it expires....

Swarm of 7,000 bees in garden

Swarm of 7,000 bees in garden

A QUIET Bury street was well and truly “buzzing” when 7,000 honey bees descended on a conifer tree.
The giant swarm is believed to have been attracted by the sap of the tree in the garden of a house in Westbury Close.
Owners Vera and Joe Rinkevicius had to pay £80 to have the bees removed yesterday.
Mrs Rinkevicius, aged 84, said: “I was looking out of the kitchen window and saw all these things in the air. We do get flying ants from time to time but I knew they weren’t ants.
“I flew upstairs because the windows in the loft conversion were open. Because of the sheer number of bees, I couldn’t see outside. Some were inside, but I managed to get them out before they all came down onto the conifer.”
The 7,000 bees remained together on the tree from 4pm on Tuesday until they were eventually put into a box and taken away yesterday morning by a private beekeeper.
Mrs Rinkevicius added: “Apparently, the earth near the tree is sweet smelling and they had gone for the sap. But that tree is now coming down “When they all suddenly arrived, it was quite frightening. I didn’t go outside and just kept all the windows shut. I’ve never seen anything like this in my life.”

Source: http://www.burytimes.co.uk/news/9086805.Swarm_of_7_000_bees_in_garden/

Capybara Says:

Bees are rarely a pest and are perfect for gardens, however, 7,000 bees can seem quite daunting. Beekeepers often take the bees away and re-home them and collect the honey. More often then not, this can be done free of charge. With bees its imperative that the beekeeper catches the Queen, without the Queen, the bees will fly off and die.

Contact Capybara Pest Control for further information.

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