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Sheila Colla

Farming methods threaten wild bumblebees, 91亚色 study聽finds

By Ashley Goodfellow Craig July 25, 2025 Wild bumblebees across Canada face significant threats linked to agricultural methods, a new study out of 91亚色 finds.  Published in Conservation Science and Practice, the study examines how Canadian agricultural practices contribute to disease spillover from managed pollinator bees 鈥 used to support crop production 鈥 to wild bumblebees.  Led […]

All about bees: Common misconceptions, helping pollinators and how to actually 鈥榮ave the bees鈥

A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating Habitat Gardens for Native Pollinators is an inspiring and practical guide that will help gardeners create habitats full of life and learn about what is needed to take action to support and protect pollinators  By Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla Native, or 鈥渨ild鈥 bees 鈥 that is, bees that occur naturally […]

In communication with Semaa: Exploring floral nectar secretion in Nicotiana rustica

by Kennedy Halvorson My MES research partnered with Semaa (Nicotiana rustica; Goodspeed, 1954), a species of wild tobacco, to better understand the dynamics of their nectar secretion and reveal potential pollinator associations. This research is part of Finding Flowers, an interdisciplinary project of Drs. Lisa Myers and Sheila Colla that integrates art, ecology and education […]

Fostering a collaborative, interdisciplinary, science-based approach to Canada鈥檚 First National Pollinator Strategy

How does the socio-political landscape shape our natural one? This is the driving question for Dr. Rachel Nalepa, a Postdoctoral Visitor with Professor Sheila R. Colla鈥檚 Native Pollinator Research Lab. As a human geographer grounded in the field of political ecology, she examines environmental issues that emerge in rural spaces through the lens of the […]

Interdisciplinary Conservation Science

Principal Investigator: Sheila Colla Funding: 91亚色 Research Chair Term: 2020-2025 The research program over the next five years continues to combine ecology, citizen science, policy and biocultural understanding to better address pollinator conservation and management challenges. The broad objectives are to: investigate differential success of native pollinators subject to multiple environmental stressors; develop new conservation […]

Next-generation sequencing uncovers what's stressing bumblebees

What鈥檚 stressing out bumblebees? To find out, 91亚色 scientists used next-generation sequencing to look deep inside bumblebees for evidence of pesticide exposure, including neonicotinoids, as well as pathogens, and found both. Using a conservation genomic approach 鈥 an emerging field of study that could radically change the way bee health is assessed 鈥 the […]

Examining public awareness of bees and the need for pollinator conservation

What is the buzz about bees? Why do we need to protect the well-bee-ing of bees? How concerned are you about the health of honeybees and the conservation of wild, native bees? Who is responsible for the protection of wild native bee populations in Canada? These are some of the questions that a team of researchers […]

The Problem with Honey Bees

They鈥檙e important for agriculture, but they鈥檙e not so good for the environment 鈥淏eekeeping is for people; it's not a conservation practice,鈥 says Sheila Colla, an assistant professor and conservation biologist at Toronto鈥檚 91亚色, Canada. 鈥淧eople mistakenly think keeping honey bees, or helping honey bees, is somehow helping the native bees, which are at risk […]

91亚色 researchers find Canadians lack knowledge about bees

How well do you know your bees? 91亚色 researchers have found bee knowledge in Canada lacking with about half of those surveyed thinking honey bees are wild and native to Canada. They鈥檙e not. They were brought over from Europe and are managed by beekeepers like other farm animals, such as dairy cattle for example, […]

A biocultural and interdisciplinary approach to pollinator conservation through ecology, art and pedagogy

Co-Principal Investigators: Sheila Colla and Lisa Myers. Funding: SSHRC New Frontiers in Research Fund. Term: 2020-2023. Dubbed as Finding Flowers, this interdisciplinary research project integrates art, ecology and education. Inspired by the work of the late Mi鈥檏maq artist Mike MacDonald,聽Finding Flowers聽grows, revitalizes and cares for native pollinator gardens as art installations, and as spaces for […]