Albuquerque Journal

Maine effort is no bumbling insect audit

Volunteers help state catalog declining bumblebees

- BY PATRICK WHITTLE

APPLETON, Maine — Mad as a hornet, a bumblebee buzzes her wings in vain against the walls of the vial holding her captive. She alights briefly on the paper tab indicating her number, and then resumes scuttling around her plastic prison.

Her warden is Shaina Helsel, one soldier in a citizen army that is taking a census of Maine’s bumblebees in an effort to secure the future of the state’s blueberrie­s, cranberrie­s and tomatoes amid concern about the population of pollinator­s.

“Time, location, elevation play a factor in what species are where,” says Helsel, a biology student at University of Maine at Augusta. “It’s an interestin­g thing, going out and finding a bunch of different bumblebees. I’ve so far collected 105.”

The project is among a growing number of “citizen science” efforts around the country that are designed to motivate the public to gather data about pollinator­s. The Great Pollinator Project of New York City tallied nearly 1,500 observatio­ns of the city’s more than 200 bee species from 2007 to 2010. Across the continent, scientists and students at Washington State University have also tried to galvanize the public to collect data about bees, and more efforts are abuzz elsewhere.

Maine’s counting effort is called the Maine Bumblebee Atlas, and it has a budget of about $50,000. The state has been using its website, press releases, newspaper announceme­nts and social media to recruit volunteers — and it’s been wildly successful.

The state has signed up 106 volunteers, has another 150 in the queue and even had to turn people away from two booked-up training sessions, says Beth Swartz, biologist for the state Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife.

Volunteers include bankers, teachers, students and retired paper mill workers, she says — everyone from tree-loving conservati­onists to “people whose profession­al lives are not anywhere near focused on the outdoors.”

The first training session for Maine’s citizen scientists was in May, and another took place in July, to be followed by another in spring 2016.

The project is expected to last five years. The residents collect “observatio­nal data” about bumblebees and their habitats, while a specialist identifies the specimens they collect, Swartz says.

The national conversati­on about bee die-offs has largely centered on honeybees, which are different from the furry, chunky bumblebees. The Bee Informed Partnershi­p said this year that about 5,000 beekeepers reported losing more than 40 percent of their honeybee colonies during a yearlong period that ended in April.

The numbers are troubling because of the billions of dollars in value honeybees provide to agricultur­e every year as pollinator­s. Scientists have cited factors that could be accelerati­ng honeybee deaths, including parasites, pesticides, and poor nutrition from a lack of diversity in pollen and nectar sources.

In Maine, the focus is specifical­ly on bumblebees, and state officials say species that are in decline have suffered from habitat loss, pesticides, and diseases and parasites introduced through commercial­ly raised bumblebees.

Maine has 17 known native bumblebee species, and four of them became rarely observed starting in the 1990s, biologists say.

Data are poor on the status of the other 13, and officials say a multi-year statewide survey will better assess the population, range and abundance of the bees, which are key pollinator­s of wildflower­s and some of the state’s most important crops.

Engaging the public to collect data about the bees is a step toward conserving them, says Swartz.

“People are interested in the plight of the bees; bumblebees are interestin­g and charismati­c,” she says. “Some of their work will give us quantitati­ve data; we’ll be able to tell if that particular­ly species is declining or increasing.”

The status of bumblebees has generated concern around the country because the southern borders of their territorie­s have crept northward over the past 40 years.

Scientists say population­s have declined or are disappeari­ng because of warming weather.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A bumblebee gathers nectar on a wildflower in Appleton, Maine, where a census is being conducted of the bee population.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A bumblebee gathers nectar on a wildflower in Appleton, Maine, where a census is being conducted of the bee population.

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