Toronto Star

Niagara dump transformi­ng into bee resort

Government, industry and academia join forces to help restore and revitalize pollinator population­s

- FATIMA SYED STAFF REPORTER

In the shadow of blue and yellow trucks moving garbage to a landfill and compost factory nearby, two women walk up and down a dusty path at the edge of a closed landfill in Niagara Falls, sweeping the air for bees and flies with big white nets. Their pockets are filled with test tubes where they stow away honey bees, beetles and other unidentifi­ed pollinator bugs they catch.

Kiera Newman and Julianne Oliveira sweep the site every other Wednesday for four hours, in one-hour increments, and send the bugs to a research lab at the University of Guelph to be identified and recorded.

Newman, a professor at Niagara College, and her student Oliveira are members of Eastern Canada’s first commercial beekeeping program.

The three-semester program, which started in January, coincides with the normal life cycle of a honey bee.

Their research at Walker Industries — the company that owns the landfill they sweep — is part of a pre-assessment to convert 20 hectares of the almost 70 hectares of landfill land into pollinator farms and help to restore pollinator habitat and conserve pollinatin­g species.

“We’ll be able to see what happens before the bee hives are put in and before they plant their pollinator gardens and crops,” Newman said.

“By next year we’ll be able to see how the pollinator­s are reacting.”

“We have so much land, and we have no use for it really,” said Laura Bratley, a project manager at Walker Industries. “So why not turn it into a pollinator habitat?”

This partnershi­p between industry and academia is a response to the Ontario government’s Pollinator Health Action Plan — a plan to help protect, restore and enhance a distressed species that helps provide one-third of our diet.

Released on Dec. 16, 2016, the plan includes steps to “restore, enhance and protect one million acres of pollinator habitat in Ontario,” while also supporting efforts to combat crop disease and the use of neonicotin­oid pesticides — two factors that have severely stressed the species at a time agricultur­al production is rising to meet increasing population­s and changing appetites.

The Ontario Ministry of Agricultur­e, Food and Rural Affairs and the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry are working on a plan for habitat restoratio­n, which includes the longer-term action to create pollinator farms at waste management sites such as Walker Industries.

Right now, the Ontario government estimates that17,000 hectares of land are available in the landfills (both operating and closed) owned by various municipal and private companies.

The Walker Industries’ eastern landfill opened in 1982 and stayed in operation until 2009-10, when it reached capacity and was covered with a clay cap. A landfill has to be managed through its “contaminat­ing life” before anything can be done with it, said Tim Murphy, vice-president of Walker Industries’ environmen­tal performanc­e sector. This includes actively monitoring the gases emitted by the buried trash.

“What we’ve been able to do here is while we’re actively managing the landfill in post-closure, we wanted to assess the potential for top soil to be placed on top of the cover and used for agricultur­e,” Murphy said.

“So we’re looking at this as basically a long-term experiment to see about the continued reuse of landfills . . . so that it actually has some productive use,” he said

Walker Industries is in a unique position because it has both a closed and an active landfill quite close to each other.

Local farmers started cultivatin­g the closed landfill in June, after being delayed by the rainy season, and will plant winter wheat in the fall and red clover next spring.

At the same time, Newman, Olivei- ra and the nine other students in the Niagara College beekeeping program will be monitoring and researchin­g different aspects of pollinator life.

One of the ongoing studies involves placing blue, white and yellow bowls filled with some water and fragrance-free soap in the middle of the landfill to see which pollinator­s are attracted to which colour.

“They fly in and die and we can capture them to see what the abundance and diversity of native pollinator­s are in the area,” Newman said.

It’ll be a few years until the data from this research and that happening at the University of Guelph will be completed, she said. And it’ll be a year before the landfill at Walker Industries turns into a full-grown pollinator farm.

The important thing, Oliveira says, is that the research is addressing the food security and ecosystem that pollinator­s vitally contribute to and need. Walker and Niagara College have just added the first hives near the landfill, with more to come.

“(Pollinator­s) need habitats if they’re going to survive.”

 ?? RANDY RISLING PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? Walker Industries is converting 20 hectares of its 70-hectare Niagara Falls landfill into pollinator farms to help protect bees.
RANDY RISLING PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR Walker Industries is converting 20 hectares of its 70-hectare Niagara Falls landfill into pollinator farms to help protect bees.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Julianne Oliveira, a student in Niagara College’s beekeeping program, is part of a team studying the effect the project will have on the local bee population.
Julianne Oliveira, a student in Niagara College’s beekeeping program, is part of a team studying the effect the project will have on the local bee population.
 ?? RANDY RISLING PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? The project is in response to Ontario’s plan to restore, enhance and protect one million acres of pollinator habitat.
RANDY RISLING PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR The project is in response to Ontario’s plan to restore, enhance and protect one million acres of pollinator habitat.
 ??  ?? The queen bee is marked with a white dot in a beehive at the landfill.
The queen bee is marked with a white dot in a beehive at the landfill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada