Operation Pollinator sows seeds for buzzing environment
A new project designed to reverse the desperate plight of
bumblebees and pollinating insects in the UK, by restoring valuable
new habitats on golf courses, is being pioneered by Syngenta and
the STRI. The initial pilot project of Operation Pollinator is now
running on four selected courses, to provide valuable information
on the best management techniques.
Operation Pollinator aims to demonstrate that golf and the
environment can co-exist. Simon
Elsworth, Syngenta Turf Manager, believes golf courses could
provide essential sanctuaries for bumblebees and other beneficial
insect species. "Bumblebees play a crucial role as natures'
pollinator, but they are in serious decline and need our help now.
Helping to resurrect bumblebee populations will help to prove that
golf courses can be managed in harmony with the
environment." 
Golf courses cover 150,000 hectares of UK land area, and creating
specialist habitat on less than 0.5% of the area would still make a
hugely significant impact on bumblebee numbers, according to Mr
Elsworth (right). "Golf courses provide ideal locations because
they are stable, little disturbed and normally support significant
tracts of land out of play. With the right management these areas
could provide ideal habitat for bumblebees and other
invertebrates."
Three golf clubs are currently taking part in a trials
programme - Loch Lomond in Scotland; Middlesborough Golf Club in
the North East and Mid-Herts Golf Club, along with a fully
controlled and replicated trials site at the STRI in Bingley, West
Yorkshire.
"We want to demonstrate that golf courses and sports
facilities can continue to be managed to give the very best of
playing conditions, alongside habitat areas managed to give
opportunities for wildlife," says Mr Elsworth. "With this approach,
the overall environmental contribution of a golf course can be a
net gain in biodiversity, whilst maintaining the level of inputs
required to produce top quality playing
surfaces."
He believes that even the most intensively of played golf
courses can find space for environmental habitat creation. For some
clubs this may incorporate rough management, but in most instances
will be out of play areas which can be left principally
undisturbed. The experiences of those clubs involved in the trial
and the involvement of STRI will further give the reassurance it
can be integrated onto other courses.
Results should prove extremely valuable to help other
courses establish and manage wildlife rich habitats, according to
Bob Taylor, Head of Ecology and Environment at STRI. He believes
the management practices developed to deliver pollen and nectar
rich habitat for bumblebees will be hugely beneficial for other
flora and fauna on the golf course.
"Improving habitat conditions for bumblebees will
represent an important environmental gain with little or no
detriment to the playing of the game. It is hoped that
this work will generate a wider acceptance and awareness of golf's
positive environmental role within the wider
landscape.
"The Operation Pollinator trials will provide information
and practical expertise on how best to create, improve and manage
quality habitats for bumblebees in out of play areas on the golf
course." he added.
Get to grips with rough
Operation Pollinator could offer a solution to managing
rough more effectively for BIGGA Master Greenkeeper, Daniel
Lightfoot, course manager at Bearwood Lakes in
Berkshire.

Many of the holes on the immaculately maintained parkland
course are defined by areas of carefully placed and managed rough
grasses, designed to be both visually appealing and challenging for
golfers. But with dense Ryegrass,
Timothy and Yorkshire Fog dominating the rough grass mixtures, any
ball that misses the fairway could be permanently lost, or at very
least take an age to find.
"We are keen to get back to rough areas with a greater
proportion of light fescue grasses, which will retain the renowned
characteristics of the course, but pose fewer problems for the
players," says Daniel. "If it can incorporate wildflowers without
detracting from the playing conditions, then it could have an
environmental benefit too."
One of the treatments under evaluation in trials at
Bearwood Lakes is the use of Rescue to control aggressive
grasses, which could allow wildflowers sown into the fescue mixes
to establish successfully.
Daniel adds: "We are keen to integrate environmental
features onto the course where possible, providing it does not
impinge on the quality of the golf offered. For most members, the
golf is paramount, but that doesn't mean that we can not do things
which can benefit both the ecology and the environment in which
they are playing.
"The Operation Pollinator trial will give us a
science-based indication of what can be achieved, and how best to
makes use of the techniques."
Bumblebee Background
Bumblebees face a very uncertain
future in the UK. One of the twenty species previously found has
disappeared altogether, and three more are on the verge of
extinction.
Total bumblebee numbers have declined by over 70% in
just the last twenty years, due to the loss of suitable
habitats.
Creating more open wildflower rich areas of
grassland will put back vital pollen and nectar rich sources for
bumblebees. Encouraging the right kinds of
wildflowers will be the key to longer term survival of these
important species.
Areas of bumblebee habitat need not be large;
experts have calculated that the creation of just 0.1 of a hectare
(100m x 10m) of specific habitat can make a significant difference
to bumblebee numbers.
