Spy gear is being used to uncover the secrets of bumble bees in Tasmania.
Bumble bees in Tasmania are being geared up with micro radio transmitters and cameras to help scientists uncover their environmental impact and crucial role in crop pollination.
Delivered through Hort Innovation’s Frontiers investment program and led by Western Sydney University, the $3.3 million initiative will produce a comprehensive large-scale study of the buff-tailed bumble bee.
The program will use various cutting-edge technological solutions to efficiently generate a large volume of unique and rigorously collected data.
Hort Innovation chief executive officer Brett Fifield said the investment formed part of a multi-pronged approach to ensure the horticulture sector was prepared for the future.
“This investment is a prime example of using breakthrough research to strengthen industry’s readiness for existing and emerging opportunities and threats,” Mr Fifield said.
“With the arrival of Varroa mite to the Australian mainland, there is a sense of urgency for industry to explore other potential options for safeguarding crop pollination services across the country. This research will expand our knowledge of bumble bees in Tasmania, giving growers another tool in their toolkit.”
Western Sydney University postdoctoral researcher James Makinson said incorporating state-of-the-art technology would result in significantly more comprehensive insights than previously possible.
“Radio transmitters will allow us to discover the daily foraging habits of bumble bee queens in different agricultural and natural landscapes and allow us to follow bees back to their nests,” Dr Makinson said.
“Transmitters can be easily recovered, allowing us to track dozens of individuals across multiple field sites in a single season.
“The automated real-time analysis of video footage from our audiovisual monitors will allow us to collect long-term continuous data of the foraging activity of wild bumble bee and managed honey bee colonies, saving hundreds of hours of fieldwork and data analysis.
“Monitoring cameras can be placed in the field and left alone, allowing a single researcher to monitor multiple locations of interest, passively collecting data for multiple experiments.”
Fruit Growers Tasmania chief executive officer Peter Cornish said the insights would help the Tasmanian horticulture industry plan effectively for the future.
“This research will answer important questions about bumble bees as pollinators. What are bumble bees doing in Tasmanian ecosystems? How are they interacting with different commercially-important crops? Can their populations be naturally manipulated to achieve conservation or pollination service goals?” Mr Cornish said.
“The findings will inform future decision-making for our industry on how to best balance the risks and opportunities posed by bumble bee pollination services in Tasmania.”
Tasmanian tomato grower Anthony Brandsema said local growers welcomed the start of this research.
“The insights generated by this research will be invaluable to growers across Tasmania looking to boost pollination on their farms,” Mr Brandsema said.