Endangered species creates buzz at Chicago Botanic Garden

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A rare rusty patched bumble on wild bergamot at the Chicago Botanic Garden in July. | Photo by Nick Dorian

The Chicago Botanic Garden last week announced a new visitor to its acres of plantings, and it comes with wings and a jaunty orange patch on its back.

The federally endangered rusty patched bumblebee (Bombus affinis) was sighted this summer foraging at the gardens for pollen and nectar, a finding that suggests that private gardens could help support populations of native pollinators.

Nick Dorian — a Synthesis Center for Conservation and Restoration fellow in the Negaunee Institute for Plant Conservation Science and Action — was in the gardens with a student in July, collecting data for a research project for home gardeners about how they can support pollinators. Suddenly, he and his student both saw the bumblebee, sporting its distinct rusty patch, like a logo on a sports jersey. Later in the session, they saw it again and began snapping photos…

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