The results are in from this year's National Bee Count in the Netherlands, and the picture they paint is a familiar and concerning one. Bumblebees remain in short supply across the country, continuing a downward trend that has been worrying ecologists and nature lovers alike for several years. More than 2,200 volunteers took part in the citizen science initiative this April, collectively logging around 46,000 bees and other pollinating insects over the course of the survey period.
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Numbers Stubbornly Flat, Bumblebees Still Struggling
The count ran from April 16 to 20, and participants recorded an average of 21 pollinators per half hour — barely any change from last year's average of 22. While that near-stability might seem neutral on the surface, the persistent scarcity of bumblebees tells a more troubling story. Mason bees once again topped the charts as the most frequently spotted species, while multiple bumblebee varieties continued to lag far behind.
The longer-term data make the scale of the problem hard to ignore. Since 2018, bumblebee populations in the Netherlands have fallen by 40 percent. Organisers of the count attribute part of this to the disappearance of specific plants that bumblebees depend on.
Unlike smaller bee species, bumblebees have long tongues and larger bodies, meaning they rely on particular flowering herbs — ground ivy, lungwort, and comfrey among them. These plants are becoming increasingly rare in Dutch gardens, quietly removing a vital food source that bumblebees cannot easily replace.
Why Gardens and Weather Are Making Things Worse
Beyond plant loss, two other factors are compounding the problem.
Cold and wet spring conditions have made it harder for bumblebee queens to successfully establish new nests. When temperatures drop and rain persists early in the season, foraging activity slows, and food becomes scarcer, reducing the chan.
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