Planting for the Future

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CrossCountry Trains supported the planting of 2 hectares of wildflowers in the UK in 2025

Pollination underpins life on Earth, shaping ecosystems, global food production and the stability of the natural world we depend on every day. One out of every three mouthfuls of food relies on animal pollination, and in the UK alone the benefits that pollinators provide to crop production are estimated at £691 million each year. Yet despite their irreplaceable role, pollinators are in crisis. Scientific assessments show that pollinators are declining globally, driven by habitat loss, climate pressures and harmful chemicals. The health of our pollinating insects is directly tied to the security of our food systems and the resilience of natural ecosystems, which is why the support of organisations like CrossCountry Trains is so vital.

The UK hosts an exceptional variety of pollinating insects. There are 275 species of bee alone, alongside 280 hoverfly species, more than 2,200 moth species, 6,700 other species of fly, and numerous beetles, wasps and thrips that contribute to pollination. These species support not only our food crops but the wildflowers, grasslands and woodlands that underpin entire food chains.

The landscapes these species depend on have been dramatically altered. England and Wales have lost over 97% of its flower-rich grasslands since the 1930s, an area equivalent to one and a half times the size of Wales. These meadows once formed extensive, connected networks across the countryside; today, most survive only as isolated fragments. As a result, many pollinators struggle to find the nectar, pollen and nesting sites they need. This fragmentation is one of the primary reasons why once-widespread species have become rare or disappeared entirely.

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The consequences of this loss are stark. Half of the UK’s 27 bumblebee species are in decline, three species have already gone extinct, and seven have suffered declines of more than 50% in just the last quarter-century. Our butterflies and moths tell the same story, with 71% of butterflies and two-thirds of moths now in long-term decline. Even common species are becoming increasingly scarce. The 2025 Bugs Matter Survey, led by Buglife and Kent Wildlife Trust, recorded a nearly 60% decrease in UK insect numbers since 2021, signalling severe and rapid ecological change.

This is why wildflower restoration is one of the most impactful interventions we can make. Wildflower-rich habitats support more pollinator species than any other habitat type, providing nectar, pollen, nesting opportunities and refuge throughout the year. GreenTheUK has partnered with Buglife to deliver the B-Lines initiative – a nationwide network of “insect highways” – to reconnect fragmented landscapes with new and restored wildflower areas, allowing pollinators to move, feed and breed across the country.

By supporting wildflower restoration with GreenTheUK and Buglife, CrossCountry Trains is helping to rebuild these ecological lifelines and reverse decades of habitat loss. This work extends far beyond protecting insects: it strengthens food security, enhances climate resilience, and restores the natural systems that future generations will depend on.

Wildflower Restoration in Northumberland (2 hectares)

Running from November 2022 to May 2027, “Pollinators Along the Tweed” is a partnership project led by Buglife, aiming to create a connected network of habitats for pollinating insects along the River Tweed B-Line. Part of the wider Destination Tweed initiative, led by Tweed Forum, the project works to enhance cultural, river, and landscape value across the region. The project hopes to restore, increase, and connect up to 40 hectares of pollinator-friendly habitat across 50 sites.

As part of this initiative, The Boathouse and Canny in Norham, Northumberland, were selected for meadow creation. The site is just 13 minutes from Berwick-upon-Tweed station, on the CrossCountry Trains network. Following initial site visits and discussions with the landowner, two main areas were chosen.

Area A, approximately 1.5 hectares, was largely dominated by Yorkshire Fog and Perennial Rye Grass, with generally low species diversity. Vegetation surveys recorded Meadow Foxtail, Creeping Bent, and White Dead Nettle, while invertebrate surveys during spring and summer identified 23 species, including five butterfly species, seven bumblebee species, and several solitary bees.

Area B, around 0.5 hectares, is currently being transitioned into an orchard, with tree planting scheduled for winter 2025 by project partners. Similar to Area A, it is dominated by Yorkshire Fog and Rye Grass.

Both areas were prepared and seeded by contractors. The process began with a full cut and removal of existing vegetation, followed by soil preparation to create approximately 50% bare ground, providing gaps for seed germination. A custom wet meadow seed mix was sown in Area A, while a custom orchard meadow seed mix was used in Area B. Additional Yellow Rattle was added to Area A to help control grass dominance, as this hemiparasitic plant suppresses vigorous grasses by drawing water and nutrients from their roots, facilitating successful meadow establishment.

Since seeding, seedlings have begun to emerge across both areas, marking the first steps in transforming these former grass-dominated fields into thriving habitats for pollinators and local wildlife.

Wildflowers & Grasses Planted

Common Cat’s-ear

Common Cat’s-ear: Hypochaeris Radicata

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Common Cat’s-ear: Hypochaeris Radicata

These bright yellow flowers can be found growing in grassy areas all over the UK, from roadside verges to parks and meadows. This plant has an impressive rosette of leaves, which means it is often mistaken for the dandelion. The common cat’s-ear can be frustrating for gardeners, as it uses its strong root to anchor itself to the ground before springing up on lawns.

Autumn Hawkbit

Autumn Hawkbit: Leontodon Autumnalis

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Autumn Hawkbit: Leontodon Autumnalis

The autumn hawkbit shares part of its name with the dandelion because the two flowers are really very similar. This grassland perennial’s yellow rosette flowers are in full bloom from June to October. Unlike its hairy cousin, the rough hawkbit, the autumn variety has slender, almost hairless leaves.

Rough Hawkbit

Rough Hawkbit: Leontodon Hispidus

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Rough Hawkbit: Leontodon Hispidus

The rough hawkbit is a rather hairy plant which fares best in the full sunshine. It looks quite a lot like the dandelion and shares its famously diuretic properties. Hawkbits have a sweet smell, like honey.

Ragged-robin

Ragged-robin: Lychnis Flos-cuculi

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Ragged-robin: Lychnis Flos-cuculi

Ragged-robin gets its name from its pink flowers which look almost as though they have been shredded. The number of these star-shaped wildflowers is declining here in the UK. They grow particularly well in damp places, where they are a haven for butterflies, bees and other insects.

Self-heal

Self-heal: Prunella Vulgaris

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Self-heal: Prunella Vulgaris

Self-heal’s bright purple flowers grow close to the ground in meadows and grasslands as well as by the side of the road and on lawns. It is in bloom between June and October. As you might expect from the name, this small plant has long been used in herbal medicine to treat a number of ailments.

Bird’s-foot Trefoil

Bird’s-foot Trefoil: Lotus Corniculatus

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Bird’s-foot Trefoil: Lotus Corniculatus

Bird’s-foot trefoil is already a pretty great name, but this plant has many other exciting aliases, including “hen and chickens” and “eggs and bacon”. These colourful names refer to the plant’s red and yellow flowers. Its seed pods are reminiscent of a bird’s claws.

Yarrow

Yarrow: Achillea Millefolium

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Yarrow: Achillea Millefolium

This hardy perennial has a slightly aniseed taste and can be made into tea; in the Middle Ages, it was used to flavour beer. Centuries ago, Yarrow was used to heal wounds and stop bleeding, but it was also thought to start nosebleeds, and still has the nickname “nosebleed plant”. Starlings and other birds use yarrow to line their nests.

Yellow-rattle

Yellow-rattle: Rhinanthus Minor

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Yellow-rattle: Rhinanthus Minor

This plant’s yellow flowers are in bloom from May to September. It makes a popular addition to any wildflower meadow, as it feeds off the nutrients in other grasses, reducing competition between species. Its seeds grow in brown pods which make a slight rattling sound.

Meadow Buttercup

Meadow Buttercup: Ranunculus Acris

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Meadow Buttercup: Ranunculus Acris

Buttercups are a familiar sight around the world, with this species being particularly hard to miss with its bright yellow colour and also being referred to as the “giant” or “tall” buttercup. Commonly used by Native American tribes to treat headaches, this plant is characteristically found in grazed grasslands and prefers soil with intermediate drainage. While sometimes considered a problematic weed in mowed lawns, the Meadow Buttercup is a valued addition to wildflower meadows and one cultivated variety even has the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Ox-eye Daisy

Ox-eye Daisy: Leucanthemum Vulgare

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Ox-eye Daisy: Leucanthemum Vulgare

Ox-eye Daisy is a small, yet resilient flower and has the ability to thrive in diverse habitats. The yellow centre of the oxeye daisy is made up of many small flowers which hold nectar enjoyed by various pollinating insects, including butterflies, bees and hoverflies. A mature plant can produce up to 26,000 seeds that are spread by animals, vehicles, water and contaminated agricultural produce, and some seeds remain viable for up to nearly forty years.

Meadow Crane's-bill

Meadow Crane's-bill: Geranium pratense

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Meadow Crane's-bill: Geranium pratense

Meadow Crane’s-bill is a famously popular member of the family Geraniaceae. Growing in clumps up to 1 metre across, they have hairy stems and with saucer-shaped blooms of 5 pale violet petals. Numerous cultivars (a kind of cultivated plant that people have selected for desired traits and which retains those traits when propagated) have been grown and are available for anyone to acquire, some of which have even gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit.

Field Scabious

Field Scabious: Knautia arvensis

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Field Scabious: Knautia arvensis

These vibrant bluish-purple flowers are related to the honeysuckle, rich in nectar and attractive to insects, especially bees. They are also known as “pincushion flowers” because they have short petals with little stamens sticking out of them. This flower gets its name from the Latin word for itch, because it was once believed to be a remedy for the skin disease scabies.

Ribwort Plantain

Ribwort Plantain: Plantago Lanceolata

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Ribwort Plantain: Plantago Lanceolata

You’re most likely to see this perennial in England between the months of May and August. The hoary plantain has a rosette of leaves at its base, a slim stem and delicate pinkish-white flowers growing out of a thick spike at the top. This plant grows best in dry grassland areas, especially where there is chalk or limestone soil.

Great Burnet

Great Burnet: Sanguisorba officinalis

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Great Burnet: Sanguisorba officinalis

Great burnet has a taste that is somewhat reminiscent of cucumber, making it a popular kitchen garden plant for use in drinks, salads, sauces and elsewhere. In the 1600s, English settlers took it with them to the New World where it quickly became a popular delicacy, and Thomas Jefferson was known to be a fan. He wasn’t the only one; Sir Francis Bacon suggested planting salad burnet along pathways to perfume the air.

Tufted Vetch

Tufted Vetch: Vicia Cracca

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Tufted Vetch: Vicia Cracca

Tufted Vetch is known for its vibrant purple flowers and can be seen on grasslands, scrubland, woodland edges and the coast. Like other Legume plants, including beans and peas, Tufted Vetch has nitrogen-fixing properties which enrich their surrounding solis. Nitrogen is an essential part for plant growth and most plants rely on the availability of nitrogen in the soil to survive.

Red Clover

Red Clover: Trifolium pratense

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Red Clover: Trifolium pratense

As with all clovers, Red Clover is part of the bean family Fabaceae and native to Europe, Western Asia, and parts of Northern Africa. Despite the name, the Red Clover boasts dark pink flowers and is extremely popular both with many types of bumblebees as a food source and people as an ornamental plant. The flowers are edible and can be used as a garnish or ground into flour. It is also extremely valued as a fodder crop as it increases social fertility by nitrogen fixation.

Meadow Vetchling

Meadow Vetchling: Lathyrus pratensis

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Meadow Vetchling: Lathyrus pratensis

Meadow Vetchling is a scrambling plant that is part of the Legume (pea) family. It’s found in hardy habitats like rough grassland, wasteland and road verges due to its climbing nature. Looking for vibrant yellow flowers followed by shiny black seeds will help identify this species.

Betony

Betony: Stachys officinalis

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Betony: Stachys officinalis

Deriving its name from the Greek “stachys” meaning “ear of grain,” the commonly called Purple Betony has a spiked shape inflorescence (the arrangement of the flowers on a plant). Purple Betony has a long and detailed history, even being referenced in Pliny the Elder who claimed it was 'a plant more highly esteemed than any other.' Showing up in numerous books over the millenia, many uses for the plant have been described such as: having dream-controlling properties, an old remedy for arthritis and gout, being used to make wine and holy water, and witchcraft.

Devil's-bit Scabious

Devil's-bit Scabious: Succisa pratensis

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Devil's-bit Scabious: Succisa pratensis

A bright-purple flower with a variety of medical purposes, the Devil’s-bit Scabious is both a beautiful garden addition and useful to have around. It differs from other Scabious species by having five-lobed flowers instead of four-lobed and prefers damper soil. Folk tales claim the name is from the short black root being bitten off by the devil. Across the British Isles it is found growing in grasslands, hedgerows, marshes, meadows, and pastures. Devil’s-bit Scabious is wonderful for local biodiversity as it gets frequented by many types of insects, with hoverflies in particular being a preferred visitor. It is the larval food plant of two rare species: the marsh fritillary butterfly and narrow-bordered bee hawk-moth, and sites with their presence are carefully managed.

Sneezewort

Sneezewort: Achillea ptarmica

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Sneezewort: Achillea ptarmica

Containing a multitude of exciting features, the Sneezewort rivals their number with the amount of intriguing names it has: fair-maid-of-France, goose tongue, white tansy, and more. Sneezewort boasts very pretty clusters of white flowers and develops in the pattern of the fibonacci sequence. The leaves can be consumed raw or cooked and chewing on them produces a numbing, tingling effect. Sneezewort is a hardy plant, preferring full sun, well-drained soil, and can tolerate hot summers and droughts.

Small Scabious

Small Scabious: Scabiosa Columbaria

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Small Scabious: Scabiosa Columbaria

You’ll find this beautiful pale-lavender or blue flower filling gardens across the UK. It is extremely widespread, naturally hailing from all the way from Sweden to Angola. Across Europe it grows in grasslands rich in calcium carbonate and can reach a metre in height. It has four currently accepted subspecies and numerous cultivars showing off different coloured flowers.

Cuckooflower

Cuckooflower: Cardamine pratensis

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Cuckooflower: Cardamine pratensis

Cuckooflower bears soft pink or white blooms in early spring. Common in damp meadows and riverbanks, it is a vital larval foodplant for orange-tip butterflies and an early nectar source for queen bumblebees emerging from hibernation.

Meadowsweet

Meadowsweet: Filipendula ulmaria

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Meadowsweet: Filipendula ulmaria

A fragrant wetland plant with frothy cream flowers, Meadowsweet grows along streams and in damp meadows. Flowering in summer, it provides abundant nectar for bees and hoverflies, while its deep roots help bind and stabilise riverbank soils.

Water avens

Water avens: Geum rivale

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Water avens: Geum rivale

Water avens produce pink-orange flowers in late spring. Found in damp woodlands and stream edges, it supports long-tongued bees and other wetland pollinators. Its feathery seed heads add structure and shelter to wet meadow habitats.

Greater Bird’s-foot Trefoil

Greater Bird’s-foot Trefoil: Lotus pedunculatus

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Greater Bird’s-foot Trefoil: Lotus pedunculatus

This moisture-loving wildflower produces clusters of yellow blooms and flowers in June - late August. Found in damp meadows and pond margins, it offers valuable nectar for bees and butterflies and provides a key larval foodplant for species like the common blue.

Gypsywort

Gypsywort: Lycopus europaeus

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Gypsywort: Lycopus europaeus

Gypsywort is a wetland perennial with white, purple-speckled flowers that appear in summer. Growing along rivers, ponds, and marshy ditches, it provides nectar in habitats where few plants can thrive. Its roots help stabilise soft, silty banks and offer cover for wetland invertebrates.

Black Knapweed

Black Knapweed: Centaurea Nigra

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Black Knapweed: Centaurea Nigra

Black Knapweed, a native UK wildflower, is recognised by its distinctive bright pink and purple, thistle-like flower heads. It's a superb wildlife plant as the flowers are rich in nectar and pollen, and attract bees, moths and butterflies such as the Marbled white butterfly. It’s seeds are popular with birds like goldfinches.

Common Vetch

Common Vetch: Vicia Sativa

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Common Vetch: Vicia Sativa

A member of the pea family, Common Vetch is an edible plant; its flowers and leaves can be eaten raw or cooked. It is useful as a soil-fertilising plant as it is able to make its own nitrates, a special nutrient essential for healthy plant growth. Its flowers, which appear between May and September, are pinky-purple and pea-like.

Common Bent

Common Bent: Agrostis Castellana

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Common Bent: Agrostis Castellana

This slightly wispy, bristly perennial grass grows quickly. It is also known as highland bent, and is often found on roadsides or in wildflower meadows. Common bent is what is known as a hyperaccumulator of zinc and lead, which means it can grow in soils with a high concentration of those metals.

Crested Dog’s-tail

Crested Dog’s-tail: Cynosurus Cristatus

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Crested Dog’s-tail: Cynosurus Cristatus

This common perennial grass grows in tufts in lowland areas where there isn’t too much water. Crested dog’s-tail is stiff and used to be used for making bonnets. It germinates quickly but takes quite a while to grow, so it doesn’t compete against and dominate other species in the wildflower meadow.

Sheep’s Fescue

Sheep’s Fescue: Festuca Ovina

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Sheep’s Fescue: Festuca Ovina

This narrow-leaved grass grows in tufts and is slightly spiky in appearance. It fares well in loamy soil and is often found growing in pasturelands where, as you might expect from the name, sheep like to graze on it. Sheep’s fescue has very dense bunches of roots, which makes it tricky for weeds to take hold nearby.

Red Fescue

Red Fescue: Festuca Rubra

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Red Fescue: Festuca Rubra

Widespread across the entire Northern Hemisphere, this species of grass can grow in all sorts of habitats and climates. It does however, prefer shade and is often planted as an ornamental species in gardens for its shade tolerance. It has narrow, needle-like leaves and as such is commonly avoided by livestock.

Meadow Foxtail

Meadow Foxtail: Alopecurus Pratensis

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Meadow Foxtail: Alopecurus Pratensis

Meadow Foxtail is one of the earliest grasses to bloom in the UK, flowering as early as April. It’s widely cultivated for both hay and pasture grazing and grows to around one metre in height. Aside from grazing animals, it is known to be a food source for many caterpillars, such as the Essex skipper.

Sweet Vernal

Sweet Vernal: Anthoxanthum odoratum

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Sweet Vernal: Anthoxanthum odoratum

A delicate grass that flowers between April-July, known for its sweet, vanilla-like scent. Sweet vernal grass is often one of the first species to colour spring meadows and plays a key role in creating the fragrant character of traditional hay. It is the foodplant for the larvae of brown and skipper butterflies.

Meadow grass, rough-stalked

Meadow grass, rough-stalked: Poa trivialis

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Meadow grass, rough-stalked: Poa trivialis

An adaptable species able to grow in a wide range of habitats, from meadows, pastures, and rough verges to marshes, ponds, ditches, and stream edges. It can tolerate drought on dry soils and even walls, and readily regenerates from buried shoots after disturbance.

Meadow fescue

Meadow fescue: Festuca pratensis

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Meadow fescue: Festuca pratensis

A tall, tufty grass commonly found in hay meadows and fertile pastures. Meadow fescue produces abundant leafy growth that is palatable to livestock and supports pollinating insects that nest in the base.

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Over time, this meadow should be home to a rich variety of wildlife which could include…

Buff-tailed bumblebee: Bombus terrestris

Buff-tailed bumblebee

These are the giants of the bumblebee world, and the whole species is named after the buff colour of their queen’s tail. They can be found in the UK’s lowlands, nesting underground in very large groups. These insects are very fond of nectar, and if they can’t easily reach it with their tongues, they will bite a hole in the flower to suck it out.

Common Carder Bee: Bombus Pascuorum

Common Carder Bee

This relatively small ginger-coloured bumblebee is widespread throughout the UK, in habitats including farms, woods and gardens. Carder bees have very long tongues and feed on heather, clover and lavender. They often nest in old mouse runs and disused birds’ nests.

Red-tailed Bumblebee: Bombus Lapidarius

Red-tailed Bumblebee

This is an abundant species of bumblebee that is found all over the UK. This social bee nests in disused burrows, under stones or at the base of old dry stone walls. Both males and females have the eponymous red tails as well as velvety black bodies and transparent wings.

Honeybee: Apis Mellifera

Honeybee

Honeybees have six legs, four wings and five eyes. They use the Sun, and possibly the Earth’s magnetic fields, to navigate, and they can fly at speeds of up to 20mph when in search of food. At the height of summer there are around 40,000 honeybees in each hive, and that number drops to around 5,000 in the winter.

Tawny Mining Bee: Andrena Fulva

Tawny Mining Bee

These furry, ginger bees are commonly found in parks and gardens across southern Britain during April and May. They feed from a wide variety of plants including dandelions, buttercups, willows and fruit trees. Tawny mining bees often make their nests in lawns and flowerbeds or in orchards where they can be close to apple, pear and cherry blossom for example.

Red Mason: Osmia Rufa

Red Mason

Also known as the red mason bee, this insect can be found in cities, towns and villages across Britain and Europe. Females make their homes and lay their eggs in wall cavities, under roof tiles and even inside keyholes, lining their nests with mud. These bees are excellent pollinators, particularly of apple trees.

A Leaf-cutter Bee: Megachile Centuncularis

A Leaf-cutter Bee

As the name suggests, if you spot semi-circular holes in leaves, it’s a sign that this bee has been at work in your garden. The insect then carries the little pieces of leaf back to its nest, gluing them together with saliva to build cells for their larvae. You can spot this bee from April to August when it flies around feeding on pollen and nectar.

Buff-banded Mining Bee: Andrena Simillima

Buff-banded Mining Bee Stamp

The buff-banded mining bee is mainly found along the north Cornish coast. Its body is a deep reddish-brown colour, decorated with the buff-coloured stripes that give the bee its name. Mining bees are so-called because they burrow into the ground to make their nests.

Marmalade Hoverfly: Episyrphus Balteatus

Marmalade Hoverfly

The marmalade hoverfly is so-called because it is orange with black stripes that are thin or “thick cut” just like the popular preserve! It is Britain’s most common hoverfly and can be seen in parks, gardens, hedgerows and woods. They are present all year round, but numbers are often much higher in the summer when marmalade hoverflies migrate to the UK from abroad.

Drone Fly: Eristalis Tenax

Drone Fly

This insect’s patchy brown and orange body makes it look a lot like the male honeybee, which is a very effective way to keep it safe from predators. Drone flies also copy honeybee flight patterns as they move around in search of nectar. Their larvae, nicknamed “rat-tailed maggots”, feed on rotting organic material in stagnant water.

Pellucid Hoverfly: Volucella Pellucens

Pellucid Hoverfly

This large black fly has a white stripe on its body and black spots on its transparent wings. It can be found throughout most of Britain and Ireland, and is often seen feasting on bramble flowers in hedgerows or on the edge of woodland. The larvae develop in wasp nests where they feed on detritus wasp grubs.

Large Narcissus Fly: Merodon Equestris

Large Narcissus Fly

This medium-sized hoverfly looks very much like a bumblebee, which provides great protection against predators. This insect loves warm, sunny spots full of flowers, like gardens in the summer. Females lay their eggs on the leaves of bulbous plants such as bluebells and daffodils, and the larvae then burrow into the bulbs, feeding on them and causing some damage.

Peacock Butterfly: Inachis Io

Peacock Butterfly

This common British butterfly gets its name from the large spots on its wings, which are reminiscent of peacock feathers. These markings help to scare off predators in the woods, gardens and parks where they live. They hibernate in winter, folding up their wings to show the dull undersides so that they can blend in with their surroundings while they sleep.

6-spot Burnet: Zygaena Filipendulae

6-spot Burnet

You are most likely to spot this medium-sized moth flying around in the daytime between June and August. It has six red spots on each of its glossy black forewings. If attacked, the burnet moth will release cyanide, so the spots serve as a warning to predators that this species is poisonous.

Red Admiral: Vanessa Atalanta

Red Admiral

These large red, white and black butterflies have very powerful wings. Most of the magnificent red admirals that we see in the UK start off in North Africa and migrate north, arriving here from late March onwards and staying until autumn. Male red admirals court their females for several hours before they begin mating.

Holly Blue: Celastrina Argiolus

Holly Blue

This stunning, vibrant, blue butterfly can be seen across most of the UK, but is most common in England and Wales. Caterpillars feed on holly and ivy buds, digging into them and eating what is inside. Holly blues are very popular in Finland, where they have been elevated to the status of national butterfly!

Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly: Aglais Urticae

Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly

The small tortoiseshell is one of the UK’s most common and beloved butterfly species. Females lay their eggs on stinging nettles, before caterpillars hatch around ten days later. When courting, the males beat their antennae on the females’ hindwings.

Common Wasp: Vespula Vulgaris

Common Wasp

Anyone who has ever tried to have a summer picnic will be familiar with this yellow and black striped insect which can be found all over the UK. Queens first come out of hibernation at the very start of spring and start to look for suitable nesting sites in a range of habitats. Wasps will try to eat anything sweet, and although we might think of them as pests, they are useful pollinators.

Ruby-tailed Wasp: Chrysis Ignita

Ruby-tailed Wasp

Ruby-tailed wasps are often called “cuckoo wasps” because they lay their eggs in other insects’ nests. Shiny and turquoise with a rich red abdomen, they are strikingly beautiful in appearance. Ruby-tailed wasps have a sting, but don’t tend to use it.

Mason Wasp: Ancistrocerus Parietum

Mason Wasp

This wasp is native to Europe and North America and gets its name because it likes to build its nests in walls. Mason wasps have black bodies with yellow stripes and narrow waists. Female mason wasps are slightly larger than males, and can control the gender of their offspring.

Red Wasp: Vespula Rufa

Red Wasp

This wasp is so-called because it has reddish-brown markings on its body. Red wasps make their nests in tree stumps, using leaf litter and soil. Badgers often destroy the nests, eating them along with the wasps, as their thick hair and skin protects them from being stung.

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