The FWP weekly digest of wondrous wildlife happenings
and other interesting items from the natural world

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Lisa S. French
Bumblebee in flower
The Plight of the Bumblebee

3-minute read

Whether you look forward to the first spring flight of the bumblebee (Bombus) as a reassuring sign of nature’s capacity for renewal or are simply grateful for the fruits of the fuzzy pollinator’s labor, the recent study documenting its climate change-induced decline was a definite buzzkill. The new analysis of 66 bumblebee species across North America and Europe from researchers at the University of Ottawa and University College London reveals that over the last five decades, the growing number of unusually hot days is increasing local bumblebee extinction rates. Heatwaves and rising average temperatures have led to widespread loss of populations—an estimated 46% in North America and 17% in Europe.

Bumblebees evolved in cooler regions of the world over a period of about 100 million years, and scientists now believe that warmer winters and hotter summers resulting from global heating may exceed the iconic insect’s ability to adapt. At the current rate of emissions, it’s estimated that climate change may have greater negative impacts on the bee species than habitat loss, potentially resulting in mass extinction.

Like honey bees (Apis mellifera), wild bumblebees are important pollinators of crops and native plants, providing critical ecosystem and economic benefits for people and planet—absolutely free of charge. Both honey bees and bumblebees are accidental pollinators. In the process of drinking nectar and harvesting pollen for food, they pick up the finely-grained plant dust on their bodies or leg hair and transfer it from the anther to the stigma of the flower.

However, compared to its honey-producing cousin, the bumblebee is equipped with a few extra features that make it especially efficient at pollen gathering. Because bumblebees are bigger than honey bees, they can pick up and transfer more pollen per flower fly-by. Some species of bumblebees also have longer tongues than honey bees, not as long as this creature’s, but pretty impressive by bee standards. Longer-tongued bees are particularly skilled at lapping up nectar and pollen from hard-to-reach places in tubular flowers like honeysuckle and salvia. Bumblebees also have another expert tool in their pollen-gathering arsenal—buzz pollination, or sonication. By holding the flower with its legs or mouthparts and rapidly vibrating its flight muscles, the bumblebee can dislodge pollen from plants that can’t be pollinated through garden variety bee pollination methods. About eight percent of plants rely on this shake-and-take method of pollen gathering, including eggplants, tomatoes, potatoes, blueberries, and cranberries. In addition to its bigger size, longer tongue, and sonication skills, the bumblebee has an extended pollination season and can visit twice as many flowers per day as the honey bee.

Although bumblebees have an exceptional aptitude for pollen gathering, like many animal and plant species, their ability to adjust to the unprecedented environmental stressors of climate change is limited. Uncommonly warm winter temperatures can trick queen bumblebees into emerging from the hive well before pollen is available for food, leaving them too weak to return to the hive to lay eggs—no eggs, no bees. Come spring, higher-than-normal temperatures alter the scent, nectar, and pollen production of flowers, making them less attractive to foraging bees. And increased C02 in the atmosphere also reduces the protein level of pollen, resulting in smaller bumblebees. Smaller bees travel shorter distances, carry less pollen, and pollinate fewer flowers. To put these climate change casualties in perspective, 75 percent of the world’s flowering plants rely on pollinators for reproduction, including more than two-thirds of the world’s crops.

Unfortunately, less than one percent of bumblebee hotspots are currently protected. In a rapidly warming world, conservation aimed at maintaining habitats for the 250 species of bumblebees and assisting the insects with colonization beyond their normal range is crucial to their survival. If you’d like to help ensure that bumblebees have a soft landing wherever they roam and continue to contribute to everyday essentials, here are some tips on what to plant on your city or country patch to keep these precious pollinators buzzing:

Bumbles prefer:

Perennials because they produce more nectar than annuals
Native perennials because they produce more nectar and pollen than sterile hybrids
Symmetric two-sided flowers
Pink and violet-colored flowers

And here’s a short list of the bumblebees’ perennial favorites that you can plant from rooftop to roadside:

Daisy family (Asteraceae)
Common daisies, cornflowers, chamomile,
yarrow, fleabane, asters, dahlias, coneflowers

Flowering pea family (Fabaceae)
Lupine, mimosa, wisteria, clover

Mint family (Lamiaceae)
Sage, mint, rosemary, lavender, thyme,
lemon balm, hyssop, chaste, patchouli

You can learn more about what makes the bee bumble and how you can become a citizen conservationist from the Xerces Society and the Bumblebee Conservation Trust. For a deeper drill-down into the fascinating world of bees of all sorts, we highly recommend The Bee, A Natural History.

If you’ve got access to a front, back or side yard, or any other personal patch, you can find out how to grow climate-resilient, environmentally beneficial communities of plants that you, the bees, and other wildlife will love living within the excellent Bringing Nature Home and Planting in a Post-Wild World. And if you’re a city dweller in need of some perennial planting inspiration, visit the elevated gardens at the High Line in NYC (online or in-person) created by Dutch perennial plant master, Piet Oudolf. We may have a slight hometown bias, but as gardens go, it truly is the bee’s knees.

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Purple poppies
Decoding the Floral Language of Love

3-minute read

Some of our most beautifully poetic expressions of feeling are those drawn from the language of nature. Throughout history, flowers and plants have been used to signify deep and enduring connections to a specific culture, place, or time and as a lyrical means of communicating the nuance of human emotion and remembrance. The symbolic meaning of flowers that evolved into the coded language of floriography was rooted in the traditional customs, folklore, and religious belief systems of Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Following the publication of the first detailed floriography reference book in 1819, La Langage des Fleurs, dictionaries assigning sentiments to individual plants and flowers became increasingly popular in Western culture.

During the Victorian era (1837-1901) in the United States, France, and England, when public expression of emotion was culturally suppressed and in some cases forbidden, communicating private feelings through the secret language of flowers was readily embraced by the seriously smitten as well as the lovelorn. Flowers carefully chosen from floriography dictionaries to subtly convey heartfelt words that could not be spoken were arranged into bouquets and presented as gifts. A bouquet received from an ardent admirer and held at heart level signaled glad acceptance. Holding a floral gift upside down was a silent, but undoubtedly no less painful indication of a message received—and rejected. Floriography dictionaries could also serve as handy reference guides for those motivated to crankily communicate through a bouquet of bad feelings symbolizing negative sentiments such as disdain, disappointment, fickleness, or the all-encompassing heartlessness.

Expressing emotion through floral gift-giving is as popular in 2020 as it was in the Victorian era, and now thanks to the work of researchers in Sunnyvale, California, floriography is getting an artificial intelligence upgrade. Because one flower may have multiple meanings and multiple flowers may have the same meaning, to help ensure no important sentiment is lost in translation, believe it or not, a machine-learning algorithm has been developed to help express your flowery feelings with science-based, petal-point accuracy. To spare you the trouble of searching through an A-Z directory, emotive words and phrases that you would like to communicate to your bouquet recipient are mapped against a compendium of all possible flower meanings drawn from multiple dictionaries. Those blooms best expressing your particular level of besottedness are then rank-ordered for inclusion in the ultimate neural-network-optimized-and-designed floral arrangement. Build a better bouquet and they will come!

If you are currently preoccupied with conjuring the most meaningful way to communicate your tender feelings towards the highly esteemed object of your affection and can’t wait until there’s an official AI app for that, here’s an old-school crash course on decoding the floriferous language of love. By the way, if you thought roses were the definitive symbol of adoration, you may be surprised to learn that a bouquet of pineapples*, while a bit unwieldy, could be equally swoon-worthy, not to mention salad-worthy and certainly more memorable. Just be sure to include a translation—and a fork.

African violet • Such worth is rare
Alison • Worth beyond beauty
Calla Lily • Beauty
Camellia, red • You’re a flame in my heart
Carnation, pink • I’ll never forget you
Clematis • Soul mates, mental beauty
Chrysanthemum, red • I love you
Common lilac • Reminder of young love
Dahlia • Elegance and dignity
Daisy • Innocence and hope
Forget-me-not • True love memories
Gladiolus • Strength of character, moral integrity
Globe amaranth • Endless love
Heliotrope • Eternal love and devotion
Honeysuckle • Bonds of love
Hyacinth, white • Loveliness
Lavender • Constancy and devotion
Lily of the valley • Sweetness and purity
Mimosa • Elegance, sensitiveness, endurance of the soul
Orchids • Love and beauty
Peony • Bravery, beauty, honor
Peruvian Lily • Powerful bond
Phlox • United hearts and souls
*Pineapple • You are perfect
Ranunculus • You are radiant with charm
Rose, red • I love you
Rose, white • I’m worthy of you
Spiderflower • Elope with me
Strawberry tree • You are the only one I love
Sunflower • Adoration
Tickseed • Love at first sight
Tulip, red • Declaration of love
Wild pansy • You occupy my thoughts

And if you’d like to present your best ever, most-favorite favorite person with a living symbol of everlasting, not to mention carbon-storing love, you may want to consider a sampler of saplings. Plus, there’s a song for that.

Apple tree • Love, healing, immortality
Apricot tree • Love
Linden tree • Protection, good luck, love
Oak tree • Character, courage
Olive tree • Peace, healing, protection
Peach tree • Generosity, hope, love
Pine tree • Peace, harmony
Plum tree • Healing, beauty, longevity
Willow tree • Love, protection, health

For a beautifully illustrated excursion through the definitive history of the language and folklore of flowers, check out The Complete Language of Flowers, by S. Theresa Dietz.

Whether you’re all about AI or more into old school, a flower plucker or a tree planter, wishing you a joyful heart on St. Valentine’s Day and all of the days after that.

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Acoustic guitar
Preserving the Music of Trees

2.5-minute read

Acoustic or electric, soul-soothing or headbanging, the tonal quality of the guitar music that puts you in the zone is greatly influenced by the types of wood used to craft the body, neck, and fingerboard of the instrument. Whether it’s sourced from a common tree species like ash, spruce, or maple, or an exotic tropical like ebony, rosewood, or mahogany, the wood used to construct guitars, known as tonewood, has unique characteristics—such as density, resonance, texture, and warp resistance—that lend that special something to the sound of the strings. As a result of decades of deforestation, legal and illegal logging for export, and the introduction of invasive insects and disease, many of the trees used to produce the world’s most valuable tonewoods are now under threat.

To identify eco-friendly alternatives to endangered tree species, researchers in Germany and Finland are working to unpick the acoustic properties of rare tonewoods. In the meantime, Taylor and Fender, industry leaders in the art and science of building stringed instruments, have stepped up to launch two propagation and planting projects designed to help save the imperiled ebony and ash trees used to create the distinctive sounds of their guitars.

The jet-black, extremely durable, insect-resistant heartwood of the African ebony tree (Diospyros crassiflora) is one of the most prized and expensive woods on the planet. Ebony heartwood has been used for centuries to make everything from ships and sculptures to furniture and flooring. It is also one of the best woods for stringed instrument fingerboards and the one preferred by many acoustic and electric guitar manufacturers. One of 10,000 tree species currently facing extinction, African ebony trees grow in small, isolated clusters in lowland rainforests from Nigeria to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. During the last century, over 50% of ebony have been cut down. Almost all of the large trees from the slow-growing species have been harvested for export. Researchers at the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands estimate that 10 to 30% of those exports are illegally logged.

Enter Taylor Guitars and the Ebony Project: a pioneering conservation partnership between the guitar manufacturer, UCLA, the Congo Basin Institute, and The Higher Institute of Environmental Sciences. Based in Cameroon, Africa, the Ebony Project was established to protect and conserve the rare tree species, develop livelihoods for rural communities, reforest degraded land, and increase rainforest habitat. Trained by Ebony Project staff, local communities learn to build and maintain nurseries and propagate and grow ebony saplings. The nurseries are donated to the community to grow other valuable food and medicinal trees for sale or personal use, including mango, avocado, and kola. With the ultimate goal of planting 15,000 trees, the Ebony Project aims to create a sustainable model for the production of the exotic tonewood that also provides critical social and economic benefits to local people. Thriving forests, self-sufficient rural communities, and more guitar music for your ears—a conservation triple win.

And in Cleveland Ohio, home of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, FWP tree-planting partner American Forests has launched the Roots of Rock initiative with Fender Musical Instruments and researchers at the U.S. Forest Service in an effort to save the ash tree (Fraxinus Americana) from the hungry maw of the emerald ash borer (EAB). Fender has used ash to construct its legendary electric guitars for 70 years, but since the EAB arrived in the U.S. in 2002, the invasive species has destroyed hundreds of millions of ash trees in North America putting the future of rock at risk. To ensure Fender aficionados can continue to practice their musical artistry, the Roots of Rock team is identifying trees that have successfully warded off the voracious insect. Seeds and shoots from those resilient trees are being used to breed an EAB-resistant variety of ash that will help restore the species to its former glory. Knowledge gained from the Roots of Rock initiative to preserve the music of trees will also be used to combat invasive insects and diseases that threaten the survival of other native species to better protect the health and biodiversity of forests in North America and around the world.

You can learn more about the Roots of Rock Initiative here and read a progress report on the Ebony Project here. Oh, and by the way, rock on!

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