Bumble Bee Photo Contest

June 1st to Sept. 30th

The Friends of the Salmon River, Friends of the Napanee River and the Lennox & Addington Stewardship Council are launching a photo contest to promote awareness of our Bumble Bees andencourage all – kids and adults – to spend time in nature and take photos in our watersheds. 

Bumble bees are very important pollinators of wild flowering plants and crops (such as tomato, bell pepper and eggplant).

For our Submission Guidelines and Entry Form, see the Contest page.

To identify your Bumble bees, simply access iNaturalist or Seek. Both apps are easy to use and Seek is particularly easy and fun for children.

Prizes will be awarded for the most interesting photos. Winners can take home flowering plants that support our pollinators. Books about bees (and dragonflies, etc.) will be fun for kids.

Bumble bees are visible in the Salmon and Napanee watersheds area from March through November.  They build their nests underground or slightly above the ground. 

Bumble Bees are fairly easy to photograph as they are quite slow and often return to the same plants many times. Close-up photos will be easiest to identify.

Use the macro feature and crop as needed, so the bee IS the photo. See our examples.

Bonus Features

We strongly encourage participants to take 3 photographs with different views of the same Bee, with one showing the abdomen, one showing the wing(s) and one showing the face. Without the different views, identification can be difficult and some Bumble Bees may not be identifiable. 

You can still enter images of four different Bumble Bees. By spreading it out over the four months of the contest, you may be able to photograph different species, since several of the rarer species have short flight times.

Bonus points will be given for:

1/ the 3 different views and the plant the bee is foraging on

2/ rare species

Note that these are encouraged, but not required for submissions to the contest.

Safety: Bumble bees are less aggressive and less likely to sting than hornets and yellow jackets.  Please be very careful around bees, so that their activities are not disturbed. The Queens especially need to be protected.

BUMBLE BEES are known for the loud buzzing sound they make when they zoom by.  The genus Bombus, to which bumble bees belong, is Latin for “buzzing” or “deep roar.”  Bumble bees practice buzz pollination, using vibrations of their flight muscles to shake pollen from flower anthers. This makes them particularly effective pollinators of crops such as tomatoes, peppers and eggplants. 

To support their biology, leave areas of your yard un-mowed and add patches of rocks or bare soil, to attract them. Mint and legumes like clover species will support their need for nectar and pollen. Let Bull thistles, Goldenrods and Asters grow in the un-mowed areas. They attract many Pollinators, especially during late summer, when many native plants

Photos by Kurt Hennige

Questions? Contact infofriendsofsalmonriver@gmail.com

Susan Moore 

Friends of Salmon River

Friends of Napanee River 

Lennox & Addington Stewardship Council

613-379-5958

Common Eastern Bumble Bee___Bombus impatient

Black-and-Gold Bumblebee _Bombus auricomus

Golden Northern Bumblebee_Bombus fervidus