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December, 2021’s species of the month: Buff-tailed Bumblebee, Bombus terrestris

Buff-tailed Bumblebee Becky Walton

Buff-tailed Bumblebee, Bombus terrestris on winter flowering honeysuckle
Photo: Becky Walton

Buff-tailed Bumblebee Becky Walton

Buff-tailed Bumblebee, Bombus terrestris on Erica carnea
Photo: Becky Walton

The Buff-tailed Bumblebee Bombus terrestris is the perfect species to look out for at this time of the year; here, in the south, it has started to remain active throughout the winter, establishing nests and colonies, and foraging even on very cold days. You can often spot Buff-tailed Bumblebees visiting winter-flowering garden plants like Mahonia, Sarcococcus and Winter-flowering honeysuckles and heathers, and these plants are therefore great floral additions to any wildlife garden, helping to support a number of winter-active flower visitors. It is only the very distinctive queen that has a buff-coloured tail, and this and her larger size make her easy to identify, but she shares her yellow collar and abdominal hair band with the white-tailed males and workers. While the shade of yellow varies across the castes, from the dark, almost brown-yellow queens to the brighter workers, B. terrestris doesn’t have the lemony yellow colouring of the White-tailed Bumblebee B. lucorum complex. Male B. terrestris often have a thin yellow-buff line at the top of the white tail, as do the workers sometimes, and this can separate them from the pure white tails of the White-tailed bumbleebee complex, but workers can be impossible to distinguish in the field, especially when faded. You may not know that our UK terrestris belong to the endemic ‘buff-tailed’ subspecies ‘audax’, one of several around the world.

The Bumblebee Conservation Trust has more detailed information on identifying Buff-tailed Bumblebees, and the Bees Wasps and Ants Recording Society (BWARS) has also established a  winter bumblebees project, to learn more about distribution and foraging behaviour.

Please submit any sightings of Buff-tailed Bumblebees, with photos if possible to iRecord.

 

 

Every month it is our aim to highlight a species that is “in-season” and, although not necessarily rare or difficult to identify, has been highlighted by our local recording groups as being somewhat under-recorded and for which new records would therefore be welcomed.

If you or your recording group are aware of species such as this then please contact Bob Foreman.

Previous species of the month:

Brown Hairstreak
Sarcoscypha austriaca
Bee-flies (Bombylius spp.)
Cardinal Beetles (Pyrochroa spp.)
Heart Moth (Dicycla oo)
Nudibranchs
The Darters - Sympetrum spp.
Smooth Snake (Coronella austriaca)
The ‘Autumn Colletes
(Two) Wall Mosses
Goshawk Accipiter gentilis
Hemp-agrimony Plume Adaina microdactyla
Common Toad Bufo bufo
Brown Hare Lepus europaeus
Tapered Drone Fly Eristalis pertinax
The Spring Fritillaries (Boloria sp.)
Bird’s-foot CloverTrifolium ornithopodioides
Large Scabious Mining Bee Andrena hattorfiana
Bastard Toadflax Thesium humifusum
Hawfinch Coccothraustes coccothraustes
Pink Waxcap Porpolomopsis calyptriformis
Plumed Prominent Ptilophora plumigera
Sea Trout Salmo trutta subsp. trutta
Two epiphytic liverworts
Pseudoscorpions
Urban gulls Larus sp.
Holly Blue Celastrina argiolus
Common Starling Sturnus vulgaris
The parasitic fly Phasia hemiptera
Pantaloon Bee Dasypoda hirtipes
Umbellate Hawkweed Hieracium umbellatum L.
Cattle Egret Bubulcus ibis
Chlorencoelia versiformis
“Pill woodlice” - Armadillidiidae
December Moth(s)
Two common garden liverworts
Peniophora laeta
Lesser Whitethroat Curruca curruca
Fringe-horned Mason Bee Osmia pilicornis
Monkey Orchid Orchis simia
Ashy Button Acleris sparsana
Harvest Mouse Micromys minutus
Crataerina pallida - The Swift Flat Fly
Golden-eye Lichen Teloschistes chrysophthalmus
Buff-tailed Bumblebee Bombus terrestris
Common Shrew Sorex araneus
Lesser Spotted Woodpecker Dryobates minor
Lords and Ladies or Cuckoo-pint Arum maculatum
White-spotted Sable Anania funebris
Glow-worm Lampyris noctiluca
Silver-spotted Skipper Hesperia comma
Alder Tongue gall Taphrina alni
Virgin Pigmy Ectoedemia argyropeza
Crystal Moss Animal Lophopus crystallinus
Marmalade Hoverfly Episyrphus balteatus
Grass Snake Natrix helvetica
Large Tortoiseshell Nymphalis polychloros