Making a beeline: wildflower paths across UK could save species

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Making a beeline: wildflower paths across UK could save species

Written by Alison Benjamin

Conservation charity aims to help restore 150,000 hectares of bee-friendly corridors to save the insects from extinction

Andrew Whitehouse has been on the cliffs at Prawle Point, south Devon, searching on his hands and knees for a rare bee. He saw only one last year, and so far this summer there has been no sign of the six-banded nomad bee with its striking yellow markings.

Whitehouse fears it is on the brink of extinction because, as a parasitic bee, it depends on a host – the long-horned bee – in whose nest it lays its eggs, and the host is now also scarce.

Related: Halve UK pesticide use to save insects, say conservationists

Related: Coronavirus may prove boost for UK's bees and rare wildflowers

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