The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Anger as colony of bees found dying in street

Insects appear to have been poisoned, says beekeeping expert

- SEAN O’NEIL soneil@thecourier.co.uk

Bee poisoners who appear to have wiped out a colony of the insects in Perth have been slammed by keepers.

Workers found the creatures dying on Oakbank Road with scores of the bees scattered on the footpath near a school.

The UK bee population has been in steady decline over the past decade with one third of the nation’s bees dying out.

The insects are extremely important to the environmen­t and it is believed they are responsibl­e for pollinatin­g one-third of food crops and 90% of wild flowers.

Bruce Fletcher, who found the creatures along with his father, said it appeared as if the bees had been poisoned.

Bruce said: “It looks like they’ve been in the wall and they’ve used ant killer.

“I was horrified in this day and age where the bee population is rapidly dwindling that someone would carelessly poison bees and let them struggle with a slow death.”

Enid Brown, the Kinross-based head of the Fife Beekeeper Associatio­n, agreed that the bees looked as though they had been harmed deliberate­ly.

She believes the insects might be masonry bees, as opposed to honey bees, who like to live in cracks in walls.

Enid said: “It does look as though they have been poisoned.

“People should be encouraged to appreciate them and enjoy seeing them.

“They won’t do you any harm – good pollinator­s though. Bees are all useful in some way or another.”

Gavin Ramsey, Bee Health Officer at the Scottish Beekeeping Associatio­n, believes that the dead creatures may have been chocolate mining bees, but agreed that there was no reason to kill them

Gavin said: “It’s sad to see. They’re quite harmless because there’s no sting.

“They’re great for pollinatin­g fruits and flowers.

“They are important to have around as pollinator­s but they are also important for the diversity of life.”

Gavin said that to the untrained eye, chocolate mining bees and honey bees look very similar, so it is unlikely the person responsibl­e for their deaths would have been able to tell the difference.

The beekeeper also explained the deaths were even more tragic as the small insects only live for a short period.

Gavin said: “You can get quite a lot in the same wall which can worry people but they are only around for a few weeks.”

 ??  ?? The UK bee population has been in steady decline over the past decade with one third of the nation’s bees dying out.
The UK bee population has been in steady decline over the past decade with one third of the nation’s bees dying out.

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