Skip to main content
N I Direct government services

Main navigation

  • Home
  • News
  • Contacts
  • Help
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • RSS

Translation help

Translate this page

Select a language

  • Afrikaans — Afrikaans
  • Albanian — Shqip
  • Amharic — አማርኛ
  • Arabic — العربية
  • Armenian — Հայերեն
  • Assamese — অসমীয়া
  • Aymara — Aymar aru
  • Azerbaijani — Azərbaycan dili
  • Bambara — Bamanankan
  • Basque — Euskara
  • Belarusian — Беларуская
  • Bengali — বাংলা
  • Bhojpuri — भोजपुरी
  • Bosnian — Bosanski
  • Bulgarian — Български
  • Cantonese — 廣州話
  • Catalan — Català
  • Cebuano — Sinugbuanong Binisayâ
  • Chichewa — Chichewa
  • Chinese (Simplified) — 简体中文
  • Chinese (Traditional) — 繁體中文
  • Corsican — Corsu
  • Croatian — Hrvatski
  • Czech — Čeština
  • Danish — Dansk
  • Dhivehi — ދިވެހި
  • Dogri — डोगरी
  • Dutch — Nederlands
  • English — English
  • Esperanto — Esperanto
  • Estonian — Eesti
  • Ewe — Eʋegbe
  • Filipino — Filipino
  • Finnish — Suomi
  • French — Français
  • Frisian — Frysk
  • Galician — Galego
  • Georgian — ქართული
  • German — Deutsch
  • Greek — Ελληνικά
  • Guarani — Avañe’ẽ
  • Gujarati — ગુજરાતી
  • Haitian Creole — Kreyòl ayisyen
  • Hausa — Hausa
  • Hawaiian — ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi
  • Hebrew — עברית
  • Hindi — हिन्दी
  • Hmong — Hmoob
  • Hungarian — Magyar
  • Icelandic — Íslenska
  • Igbo — Asụsụ Igbo
  • Ilocano — Ilokano
  • Indonesian — Bahasa Indonesia
  • Irish — Gaeilge
  • Italian — Italiano
  • Japanese — 日本語
  • Javanese — Basa Jawa
  • Kannada — ಕನ್ನಡ
  • Kazakh — Қазақ тілі
  • Khmer — ភាសាខ្មែរ
  • Kinyarwanda — Ikinyarwanda
  • Konkani — कोंकणी
  • Korean — 한국어
  • Krio — Krio
  • Kurdish (Kurmanji) — Kurdî
  • Kurdish (Sorani) — کوردی
  • Kyrgyz — Кыргызча
  • Lao — ລາວ
  • Latin — Latina
  • Latvian — Latviešu
  • Lingala — Lingála
  • Lithuanian — Lietuvių
  • Luganda — Luganda
  • Luxembourgish — Lëtzebuergesch
  • Macedonian — Македонски
  • Maithili — मैथिली
  • Malagasy — Malagasy
  • Malay — Bahasa Melayu
  • Malayalam — മലയാളം
  • Maltese — Malti
  • Maori — Māori
  • Marathi — मराठी
  • Meiteilon (Manipuri) — ꯃꯤꯇꯩ ꯂꯣꯟ
  • Mizo — Mizo ṭawng
  • Mongolian — Монгол хэл
  • Myanmar (Burmese) — မြန်မာစာ
  • Nepali — नेपाली
  • Norwegian — Norsk
  • Odia (Oriya) — ଓଡ଼ିଆ
  • Oromo — Afaan Oromoo
  • Pashto — پښتو
  • Persian — فارسی
  • Polish — Polski
  • Portuguese — Português
  • Punjabi — ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
  • Quechua — Runa Simi
  • Romanian — Română
  • Russian — Русский
  • Samoan — Gagana Samoa
  • Sanskrit — संस्कृतम्
  • Scots Gaelic — Gàidhlig
  • Sepedi — Sepedi
  • Serbian — Српски
  • Sesotho — Sesotho
  • Shona — Shona
  • Sindhi — سنڌي
  • Sinhala — සිංහල
  • Slovak — Slovenčina
  • Slovenian — Slovenščina
  • Somali — Soomaali
  • Spanish — Español
  • Sundanese — Basa Sunda
  • Swahili — Kiswahili
  • Swedish — Svenska
  • Tajik — Тоҷикӣ
  • Tamil — தமிழ்
  • Tatar — Татар теле
  • Telugu — తెలుగు
  • Thai — ไทย
  • Tigrinya — ትግርኛ
  • Tsonga — Xitsonga
  • Turkish — Türkçe
  • Turkmen — Türkmençe
  • Twi — Twi
  • Ukrainian — Українська
  • Urdu — اردو
  • Uyghur — ئۇيغۇرچە
  • Uzbek — Oʻzbekcha
  • Vietnamese — Tiếng Việt
  • Welsh — Cymraeg
  • Xhosa — IsiXhosa
  • Yiddish — ייִדיש
  • Yoruba — Yorùbá
  • Zulu — IsiZulu
  • Breadcrumb

    1. Home
    2. Environment and the outdoors
    3. Have a greener home and garden

    Caring for bees

    Bees are an essential part of the environment. They pollinate many commercial food crops and native plants. The number of native bees has been falling recently. Find out how you can help boost their survival rates by having plants for feeding and places for them to shelter.

    Contents

    Skip table of contents
    • How you can help bees
    • Types of bees

    How you can help bees

    There are a number of things you can do to help protect bees. For example,  giving them food and shelter in your garden, using pesticides responsibly and beekeeping.

    Beekeeping

    Apart from the attraction of having your own honey, keeping honeybees can be a rewarding and relaxing hobby.

    The best place to go for advice on keeping honeybees is your local beekeeping association. They often run practical bee demonstration days and will give you information on keeping bees. Most associations have hives used for teaching purposes and give you the chance to handle bees.

    There are no restrictions on keeping bees. You can keep them in your back garden but it would be wise to check with your neighbours.

    Small gardens may not always be suitable for beekeeping. If you are in any doubt, your local beekeeping association will be able to advise you.

    • Ulster Beekeepers Association(external link opens in a new window / tab)external link opens in a new window / tab
    • Institute of Northern Ireland Beekeepers(external link opens in a new window / tab)external link opens in a new window / tab

    Food for bees

    Bees need a wide range of plants that flower from spring to autumn to feed from. These include:

    • alyssum, cornflower, sunflower, michaelmas daisy and sweet william for nectar in summer
    • bluebells, rosemary, geranium and honeysuckle
    • ivy and shrub willows for food in early and late parts of the year

    Creating shelters for bumblebees

    Bumblebees need to find places to nest and hibernate in. You can help by:

    • creating patches of bare earth in warm sheltered spaces for nesting sites
    • leaving a pile of stones, dead plant stems, fallen leaves and log piles for bumble bees to hibernate in over winter
    • buying a ready-made bumble bee box

    Pesticide use

    Misuse of pesticides can affect bees. You can help by:

    • using something else that is natural, like planting onion, garlic or marigolds
    • if you must use pesticides, only spraying in the early morning or evening when the bees and other insects will be less active
    • always storing pesticides in a secure, cool and dry place

    Types of bees

    Bumblebees

    Most commonly found in your back garden or your local park. Each species is identified by the pattern on their body (thorax) and ‘tail’ (abdomen).

    There are 13 species of true bumblebees and six species of cuckoo bumblebees. They are highly social insects who live in large colonies made up of a queen, many female worker bees (which tend the young and defend the colony) and some male bees.

    Queen bees will hibernate all winter and emerge in spring to find a new nest, where the fertilized eggs become female workers and the unfertilized eggs become males. They will then go off to mate with a new queen and start a new colony.

    Bumblebees are very important pollinators. Some are used commercially to pollinate greenhouse tomatoes and peppers. They transfer the pollen from one flower to the next by collecting it on their hairs ‘fur’.

    Bumblebees do not swarm and are not aggressive unless you disturb their colony. However, the female workers can sting you twice, unlike honeybees which die after losing their sting.

    Commonly seen are the white-tailed bumblebee and the common carder bumblebee. Look out for the slightly rarer red-tailed bumblebee.

    The decline in some species is due mainly to habitat loss to farming, forest and housing developments. Habitat fragmentation is where the bee has too far to travel to the next area of wildflower rich grassland or meadow. For a species with already low numbers, this can sometimes mean that the bees will not have enough numbers to breed with and the potential of inbreeding.

    Changes in weather and climate change could have a devastating effect on some bee populations where they are not able to adapt to an increase in the number of wet days per year or the rapid change and loss of specific habitats.

    Honeybee

    This is the most commonly known bee. There is only one native species of honeybee in Ireland. In the wild they make their nests in hollow trees.

    Solitary bees

    The type most people won’t be familiar with and often found in sand dunes. They make up most of the 81 other types of bee found here. Most are a lot smaller and not furry like bumblebees.

    More useful links

    • Animal welfare and pets
    • BeeBase - National Bee Unit(external link opens in a new window / tab)external link opens in a new window / tab
    • All-Ireland Pollinator Plan(external link opens in a new window / tab)external link opens in a new window / tab
    Share this page Share on Facebook (external link opens in a new window / tab) Share on X (external link opens in a new window / tab) Share by email (external link opens in a new window / tab)

    Have a greener home and garden

    • Being greener at school
    • Caring for bees
    • Check your oil tank
    • Controlling pests and weeds
    • Encouraging wildlife in your garden
    • Energy efficiency
    • Energy efficient electrical goods
    • Greener driving
    • Keeping chickens
    • Oil spills at home
    • Saving water in the garden
    • Saving water in the home
    • Tips to be greener for young people
    Show 1 more

    What do you want to do?
    Report a problem
    Which problem did you find on this page? (Tick all that apply)

    Messages

    Warning You will not receive a reply. We will consider your feedback to help improve the site.

    Don't include any personal or financial information, for example National Insurance, credit card numbers, or phone numbers.

    3000 character(s) remaining
    3000 character(s) remaining
    What is your question about?

    What to do next

    Comments or queries about angling can be emailed to anglingcorrespondence@daera-ni.gov.uk 

    If you have a comment or query about benefits, you will need to contact the government department or agency which handles that benefit.  Contacts for common benefits are listed below.

    Carer's Allowance

    Call 0800 587 0912
    Email 
    dcs.incomingpostteamdhc2@nissa.gsi.gov.uk

    Discretionary support / Short-term benefit advance

    Call 0800 587 2750 
    Email 
    customerservice.unit@communities-ni.gov.uk

    Disability Living Allowance

    Call 0800 587 0912 
    Email dcs.incomingpostteamdhc2@nissa.gsi.gov.uk

    Employment and Support Allowance

    Call 0800 587 1377

    Jobseeker’s Allowance

    Contact your local Jobs & Benefits office

    Personal Independence Payment

    Call 0800 587 0932

    If your query is about another benefit, select ‘Other’ from the drop-down menu above.

    Comments or queries about the Blue Badge scheme can be emailed to bluebadges@infrastructure-ni.gov.uk or you can also call 0300 200 7818.

    For queries or advice about careers, contact the Careers Service.

    For queries or advice about Child Maintenance, contact the Child Maintenance Service.

    For queries or advice about claiming compensation due to a road problem, contact DFI Roads claim unit.

    If you can’t find the information you’re looking for in the Coronavirus (COVID-19) section, then for queries about:

    • Restrictions or regulations — contact the Department of Health
    • Travel advice (including self-isolation) — contact the Department of Health
    • Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccinations — contact the Department of Health or Public Health Agency

    If your query is about another topic, select ‘Other’ from the drop-down menu above.

    For queries about your identity check, email nida@nidirect.gov.uk and for queries about your certificate, email covidcertni@hscni.net.

    For queries or advice about criminal record checks, email ani@accessni.gov.uk

    Application and payment queries can be emailed to ema_ni@slc.co.uk

    For queries or advice about employment rights, contact the Labour Relations Agency.

    For queries or advice about birth, death, marriage and civil partnership certificates and research, contact the General Register Office Northern Ireland (GRONI) by email gro_nisra@finance-ni.gov.uk

    For queries about your GRONI account, email gro_nisra@finance-ni.gov.uk.

    For queries about the High Street Spend Local Scheme,  email HSSS.mail@economy-ni.gov.uk.

    For queries about:

    • Car tax, vehicle registration and SORN
      contact the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA), Swansea
       
    • Driver licensing and tests, MOT and vehicle testing
      contact the Driver & Vehicle Agency (DVA), Northern Ireland

    If your query is about another topic, select ‘Other’ from the drop-down menu above.

    For queries about your identity check, email nida@nidirect.gov.uk.

    For queries or advice about passports, contact HM Passport Office.

    For queries or advice about Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs), including parking tickets and bus lane PCNs, email dcu@infrastructure-ni.gov.uk

    For queries or advice about pensions, contact the Northern Ireland Pension Centre.

    If you wish to report a problem with a road or street you can do so online in this section.

    If you wish to check on a problem or fault you have already reported, contact DfI Roads.

    For queries or advice about historical, social or cultural records relating to Northern Ireland, use the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) enquiry service.

    For queries or advice about rates, email LPSCustomerTeam@lpsni.gov.uk

    For queries or advice about  60+ and Senior Citizen SmartPasses (which can be used to get concessionary travel on public transport), contact Smartpass - Translink.

    If you have a question about a government service or policy, you should contact the relevant government organisation directly.  We don't have access to information about you.

    Related sites

    • gov.uk
    • nibusinessinfo.co.uk

    Links to supporting information

    • Accessibility statement
    • Crown copyright
    • Terms and conditions
    • Privacy
    • Cookies
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • RSS