Entomologists begin pilot program to track bumblebee queens

Entomology professors, including Doug Golick, are working on a project that will train high school students how to track bumblebee queens.
Entomology professors, including Doug Golick, are working on a project that will train high school students how to track bumblebee queens.

How do you put a radio-tracking device on a bumblebee? Very carefully.

Entomology professors at UNL are in the pilot stages of a program aimed at teaching high school students how to use radio tracking technology to learn about bumblebee queens that they think is the bee's knees.

There are 20 bumblebee species in Nebraska.

The project, which started in May, tentatively is called "Bumble Boosters 2.0," a reboot of a project that ran from 1999-2002.

Doug Golick, now an assistant professor in entomology, was a master's student working under Marion Ellis, an entomology professor, when the original "Bumble Boosters" program ran.

The project had high school students collect bees to keep track of the different species in the Lincoln area.

"Around that time I thought it would be really neat if we could track what bumble bees do," Golick said.

Now that the tracking technology is available, Golick and his colleagues have begun to experiment with the best method of attaching radio tracking devices to bumblebee queens.

The goal is to track newly emerged queens to see where they decide to start a nest and what they do during the time between emergence and finding a nest.

"They spend their first few weeks feeding before they establish a nest," Golick said.
Queen bumblebees find abandoned rodent dens to start their nests.

Bumblebees have a waxy substance that coats their bodies and makes it difficult to glue a device to them, Golick said.

Golick said that the best method seems to be plucking the hairs off the bees and then gluing the tracking device to the shaved area.

"We are working with stinging insects. We want to get it down right and make it safe for high school students to do," Golick said.

Each tracking device weighs about .2 grams and costs around $230, Golick said.

Golick and his colleagues are looking for funding to take the project into its next stage involving area high schools.

"I’d like to have it be a relatively large project in dozens of schools," Golick said.

Golick is also pursuing a better bumblebee domicile design through a community scientist project. Read more about the project at http://go.unl.edu/z4e.

— Heather Haskins, IANR News