From flower emblazoned cemeteries to rooftop gardens and balconies, Norway's capital Oslo is creating a "bee highway" to protect endangered pollinators essential to food production.
"We are constantly reshaping our environment to meet our needs, forgetting that other species also live in it," Agnes Lyche Melvaer, head of the Bybi, an environmental group supporting urban bees, which is leading the project.
"To correct that we need to return places to them to live and feed," she explained.
With its sunflowers, marigolds and other nectar-bearing flowers planted by bee-loving locals and school children, Abel's Garden was until recently covered only in grass but is now a floral "feeding station" for bees.
Oslo's "bee highway" aims to give the insects a safe passage through the city, lined with relays providing food a shelter -- the first such system in the world, according to the organizers.
Participants in the project -- state bodies, companies, associations and private individuals -- are invited to post their contribution on a website www.polli.no, which maps out the bees' route across the city.
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