[Pollinator] Sad news about Sheila Colla to share (includes links)

Victoria MacPhail vmacphail at gmail.com
Thu Jul 10 07:54:44 PDT 2025


Dear members of the Pollinator Community. Apologies to those who get this
message or a variant multiple times.
On behalf of the family, friends and colleagues, I'm sorry to share that
the Colla Conservation Science Lab’s founder and principal researcher and
our mentor, teacher, champion, and friend, the extraordinary Dr. Sheila
Colla, died Sunday, July 6, 2025 after bravely living with Mesothelioma for
20 months.  She leaves behind two young children, a devoted husband, other
family, and an amazing legacy in conservation, social justice, and
community building.

We will have much more to share about her life and legacy and the ways in
which our lab members and others will continue her work, but for now, we
wish to share her formal obituary
<https://www.heritagefuneralcentre.ca/obituaries/Sheila-Rafaella-Colla?obId=43309105#/obituaryInfo>
(also
copied below), GoFundMe
<https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-sheila-colla-through-cancer-treatment> page
(with another mini obituary, plus updates from along her cancer journey),
and how you may join in celebrating her life in person or remotely (see
below).  We will add future updates to her lab website here
<https://www.savethebumblebees.ca/celebrating-sheila/>.  (If the embedded
links don't work for you/disappear, please see further down this e-mail for
a summary).

*Visitation:*
TODAY, Thursday, July 10, 2025
2:00 p.m.- 4:00 p.m. & 6:00 p.m.- 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time
at Heritage Funeral Centre, 50 Overlea Blvd., Toronto

*Funeral:*
TOMORROW, Friday, July 11, 2025
9:30 a.m. eastern time
at St. Brigid Catholic Church, 300 Wolverleigh Blvd., Toronto
For those who can not attend the funeral in person, it will be
livestreamed:  *Funeral Livestream link* (available 9:15-10:45am Eastern
Time):
https://cdn.boltwave.com/stbrigid/stbrigid__scarborough_on_ca__cdn_stream.html

You can also access it via the St. Brigid's website:
https://stbrigids.archtoronto.org

It will be a Catholic mass, approximately 45mins in length.

*Reception:*
A reception will follow the funeral in the church hall. This will be where
the remarks will be shared.  It will not be part of the funeral livestream,
but we are looking into ways to share it, potentially via a recording
afterwards, pending family permission.  Monitor her lab's social media and
website (https://www.savethebumblebees.ca/celebrating-sheila/) for more
details, or reach out to me.

*In lieu of Flowers - Ways to Commemorate*
In lieu of sending floral arrangements, in Sheila’s honour, please consider
planting a flower or tree native to where you live, or uploading a bumble
bee sighting to www.BumbleBeeWatch.org (the community science project she
helped found); or find the best cannoli in your town and bring some to a
friend; or write your government officials and ask them to implement a
pollinator protection plan; or make a contribution for Marc and the
children through their GoFundMe (
https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-sheila-colla-through-cancer-treatment);
or sit quietly and contemplate the overwhelming beauty of this world even
as it breaks your heart. Or all of those. Because that’s what Sheila would
do.

*Tributes*
If you wish to share a memory or send a note to the family, one way to do
so is via the funeral home website:
https://www.heritagefuneralcentre.ca/obituaries/Sheila-Rafaella-Colla?obId=43309105#/obituaryInfo

*Summary of links:*
Obituary/funeral home page with tribute wall:
https://www.heritagefuneralcentre.ca/obituaries/Sheila-Rafaella-Colla?obId=43309105#/obituaryInfo
GoFundMe page:
https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-sheila-colla-through-cancer-treatment
Colla Research Lab page:
https://www.savethebumblebees.ca/celebrating-sheila/
Funeral livestream:
https://cdn.boltwave.com/stbrigid/stbrigid__scarborough_on_ca__cdn_stream.html


Love to all who knew her and respected her.  This will be a heavy loss
personally and professionally to many. But we can take heart in knowing her
positive impacts will ripple out for decades to come.

Victoria
(proud graduate of the Colla lab and long time friend)

****

Sheila Colla Obituary

SHEILA RAFAELLA COLLA


With heavy hearts, we share that Sheila Rafaella Colla – beloved partner
and mother, sister and daughter, teacher and mentor, scientist and author,
ecologist and activist, and friend to so, so many – died July 6, 2025 at
the age of 43, after 20 months of bravely living with Mesothelioma.


Sheila is survived by her husband Marc Michalak, cherished children Tristan
and Rowan, father Daniel Colla, mother Marlene Colla, sister Christina
Colla (Josh Huson), brothers Elia and Michael Colla, and nephews Sebastian
and Orion Huson.


Sheila was born on May 4, 1982 in East York and grew up in neighbourhoods
all over Greater Toronto from Scarborough to Markham to North York, but
spent her summers exploring the hilltops and vineyards of Veneto in the
small Italian village where her grandparents farmed.


On family walks to the tiny chapel of San Giorgio, as a little girl, Sheila
knew all the wildflowers from the local guidebooks she studied, and while
foraging wild asparagus, herbs, or blackberries, Sheila would also search
for signs of fairies. This appreciation for the land in all its generosity
and wonder – and love for winged beings – would influence the
conservationist she became.


Sheila was always a star science student so it was no surprise when she
graduated with distinction from the University of Toronto with an honours
degree in Zoology in 2005, or that she then went on to graduate in the top
5% of her class, achieving her Ph.D from York University’s Department of
Biology in 2012.


Early in her academic career, when there was virtually no public interest
in bees, Sheila was one of the first conservation scientists to study their
populations, document the decline of the Rusty-patched Bumble Bee
specifically, and successfully advocate for it to be the first bee listed
federally as endangered in both Canada and the U.S.. She used the
Rusty-patched Bumble Bee’s story as a cautionary tale to explain
conservation science and biodiversity and teach her university students,
the general public, NGOs, and government bodies to appreciate the value,
beauty, and vulnerability of all at-risk pollinators, and, most of all,
encourage participation in their protection.


The little girl who read nature guidebooks grew up to write her own. A
Field Guide to the Bumblebees of North America won the American Library
Association Outstanding Reference Source Award, and has sold more than
20,000 copies, making it one of the most widely used wildlife
identification guidebooks in North America. Another of her books, A Garden
for the Rusty-patched Bumblebee: Creating Habitat for Native Pollinators,
is a national bestseller.


Sheila’s is one of the most respected voices for wild bee conservation. Her
research papers have been cited more than 5,500 times. She gave 164 media
interviews on environmental issues. She was invited to lecture all around
the world. And she’s been celebrated with numerous awards, including the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Award for
Science Promotion, the Ontario Nature Education Award, the Entomological
Society of Canada C. Gordon Hewitt Award, and the King Charles III
Coronation Medal.


The brilliant members of her Colla Conservation Science Lab and the many
students and scientists Sheila mentored are the proudest part of her
professional legacy. A dedicated teacher, she tracked and celebrated their
accomplishments from her hospice bed.


York University gave Sheila more than an academic home: in 2005, it is
where she met a handsome young Marc Michalak, the calm counterbalance to
her determined spirit, the man who would become her husband in the summer
of 2011, and the father of their cherished children, Tristan in 2013, and
Rowan in 2016. Also the man who would learn passable Italian for her in a
week so they could legally buy property near her grandparents’ village. The
man who filled her life with music, whose videos of his singing she would
privately and proudly share with friends. The man who paused his important
work as a musician and teacher to care for their family, and make Sheila
feel safe.



Sheila deeply understood how to nurture community, whether it was in
wildlife habitat, a classroom, research lab, or in her neighbourhood of
East York where she helped organize East Enders Against Racism and local
parenting groups and worthy political campaigns, and where she would wave
over the shy neighbours to sit with her in the park on market Thursdays,
where she made sure everyone felt they belonged. Growing up, as the
first-born, she mothered her younger siblings. As an adult, she mothered us
all, and as she did, taught us how to take better care of each other.


Tristan and Rowan are her whole heart and her love for them is beyond words
and beyond the end of life.


Sheila’s loved ones are grateful for the kind support of all Hennick
Bridgepoint Hospice staff, especially Sheila’s cousin and palliative care
nurse Utina Colla whose care in Sheila’s final days was so meaningful. They
are also thankful for the support of medical oncologist Dr. Penelope
Bradbury and family doctor Dr. KitShan Lee and the other compassionate
doctors, nurses, and medical staff who provided care across her multiple
hospital visits. They also greatly appreciate the kinship Sheila found in
online Mesothelioma support groups – thank you to everyone who shared their
experience and understanding with her.


If you are able to join us to celebrate Sheila’s life, visitation is
Thursday, July 10 from 2:00 p.m.- 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.- 8:00 p.m. at
Heritage Funeral Centre in Toronto (50 Overlea Blvd.). The Funeral Mass
will take place Friday, July 11 at 9:30 a.m. at St. Brigid's Catholic
Church (300 Wolverleigh Blvd.). A reception will follow in the church hall.


In lieu of sending floral arrangements, in Sheila’s honour, please consider
planting a flower or tree native to where you live, or uploading a bumble
bee sighting to www.BumbleBeeWatch.org, the community science project she
helped found; or find the best cannoli in your town and bring some to a
friend; or write your government officials and ask them to implement a
pollinator protection plan; or make a contribution for Marc and the
children through their GoFundMe; or sit quietly and contemplate the
overwhelming beauty of this world even as it breaks your heart. Or all of
those. Because that’s what Sheila would do.

Victoria MacPhail, PhD (she/her)
Pollination Biologist and Ecologist
vmacphail at gmail.com

On Wed, Nov 15, 2023, 11:38 p.m. Victoria MacPhail <vmacphail at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hello to the Pollinator Community!  Apologies to those who get this
> message more than once.  I wanted to let you know that our dear colleague,
> Dr. Sheila Colla, of York University, one of the foremost bumble bee
> researchers in Canada and North America, has recently been diagnosed with a
> rare and aggressive form of thoracic cancer.  She is already feeling ill as
> she awaits treatment.
>
> While I can not make her cancer go away by myself , I can help to support
> her and her family financially, to ease that stress and uncertainty.  With
> that in mind, myself and some of her other friends have launched a GoFundMe
> page to help her:
> https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-sheila-colla-through-cancer-treatment.
>
> If you have done any research on bees you have probably come across her
> name.  Her PhD work set the stage for the listing of *Bombus affinis* as
> an endangered species in Canada, and she continued blazing trails from
> there. She has done critical work in her lab with students and with
> colleagues identifying and investigating the distribution, natural history,
> and conservation status of all bumble bees in N. America,
> identifying threats to them, and potential conservation solutions.  She is
> one of the lead researchers behind the community science project
> BumbleBeeWatch that is generating tons of data and awareness. Most
> recently, she and another colleague published a framework for a wild
> pollinator conservation strategy for Canada.  She has been active in
> advocating for their protection on municipal, provincial, and
> federal levels, with NGOs and industry, and given presentations and bee
> walks to literally thousands of members of the public.  To name just a few
> things!
>
> Please consider sharing this message, the link, and/or donating to
> the GoFundMe if you can. E-transfers can be sent directly to
> Sheila_123 at hotmail.com if you prefer (as GoFundMe takes a small
> percentage of the donation as a transaction fee).
>
>
>
> I know that this news will come as a shock to many of you. I am so, so
> sorry for the situation and for the need to share the news.
>
>
> *Please note that Sheila is very overwhelmed right now, and doesn’t have a
> lot of capacity to respond to messages or questions. *You can check in
> with me if you need to, and we will provide updates through the campaign
> page when we can.
>
> https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-sheila-colla-through-cancer-treatment.
>
> Best,
>
> Victoria
>
> Victoria MacPhail, PhD (she/her)
> Pollination Biologist and Ecologist
> vmacphail at gmail.com
>
>
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