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Urban wildflower roundabouts established in Inverness to help pollinators


By Alan Shields

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Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.
Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.

A Highland Council project has successfully established five wildflower roundabouts in the Inverness area.

They are designed to provide a safe haven where bees, butterflies, birds and other pollinators can thrive.

Two urban roundabouts located on the West Link road (A8082) are flowering now, while three locations on the Inverness Trunk Link Road or Sir Walter Scott Drive are due to bloom soon.

The roundabouts have been sown with wildflowers which need annual preparation and seeding.

Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.
Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.

In September, as the season comes to a close, the roundabouts will be strimmed down and the mulch left to fertilise the ground.

In addition, for the winter months, there are crocuses and daffodils ready to grow to provide early-season-pollinators with an initial food source.

The project aims to help support fraught populations of bumblebees, which are threatened in farmland by intensive farming practices, including loss of wildflowers and exposure to insecticides.

Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.
Highland Council has made meadows out of roundabouts.

Bee-friendly techniques are being used to maintain the roundabouts, including the restriction of the use of weedkiller, chemical sprays or other pesticides.


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