Pages that link to "Q39786600"
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The following pages link to Effect of human disturbance on bee communities in a forested ecosystem (Q39786600):
Displaying 50 items.
- Think globally, research locally: paradigms and place in agroecological research (Q26852696) (← links)
- The PREDICTS database: a global database of how local terrestrial biodiversity responds to human impacts (Q28652977) (← links)
- High bee and wasp diversity in a heterogeneous tropical farming system compared to protected forest (Q28710208) (← links)
- Predicting bee community responses to land-use changes: Effects of geographic and taxonomic biases (Q30276154) (← links)
- The Role of Resources and Risks in Regulating Wild Bee Populations (Q30451751) (← links)
- MODISTools - downloading and processing MODIS remotely sensed data in R. (Q30882741) (← links)
- Has land use pushed terrestrial biodiversity beyond the planetary boundary? A global assessment (Q31042381) (← links)
- Global effects of land use on local terrestrial biodiversity (Q31042382) (← links)
- The database of the PREDICTS (Projecting Responses of Ecological Diversity In Changing Terrestrial Systems) project (Q31042383) (← links)
- Native bees provide insurance against ongoing honey bee losses (Q33299375) (← links)
- Invasive mutualists erode native pollination webs (Q33319618) (← links)
- A meta-analysis of bees' responses to anthropogenic disturbance (Q33501283) (← links)
- Global pollinator declines: trends, impacts and drivers (Q33534964) (← links)
- Functional decay in tree community within tropical fragmented landscapes: Effects of landscape-scale forest cover (Q33558753) (← links)
- Evaluating the Quality of Citizen-Scientist Data on Pollinator Communities (Q33877804) (← links)
- Influence of habitat complexity and landscape configuration on pollination and seed-dispersal interactions of wild cherry trees (Q33983621) (← links)
- Decreasing abundance, increasing diversity and changing structure of the wild bee community (Hymenoptera: Anthophila) along an urbanization gradient (Q34041158) (← links)
- Forested Landscapes Promote Richness and Abundance of Native Bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) in Wisconsin Apple Orchards (Q34129530) (← links)
- Response of Wild Bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) to Surrounding Land Cover in Wisconsin Pickling Cucumber (Q34316889) (← links)
- Succession influences wild bees in a temperate forest landscape: the value of early successional stages in naturally regenerated and planted forests (Q34606990) (← links)
- Additive effects of exotic plant abundance and land-use intensity on plant-pollinator interactions (Q34788907) (← links)
- Effects of suburbanization on forest bee communities (Q35095970) (← links)
- Land-use impacts on plant-pollinator networks: interaction strength and specialization predict pollinator declines (Q35131704) (← links)
- Management of Overwintering Cover Crops Influences Floral Resources and Visitation by Native Bees (Q35757742) (← links)
- Local and landscape effects in a host-parasitoid interaction network along a forest-cropland gradient (Q35847965) (← links)
- Inter-assemblage facilitation: the functional diversity of cavity-producing beetles drives the size diversity of cavity-nesting bees (Q35914269) (← links)
- The effects of habitat management on the species, phylogenetic and functional diversity of bees are modified by the environmental context (Q38635763) (← links)
- Modeling the status, trends, and impacts of wild bee abundance in the United States (Q36459507) (← links)
- Urban gardens promote bee foraging over natural habitats and plantations. (Q36514326) (← links)
- Pollination and other ecosystem services produced by mobile organisms: a conceptual framework for the effects of land-use change (Q36758696) (← links)
- Ecology and evolution of plant-pollinator interactions (Q37241077) (← links)
- Pollinator interactions with yellow starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis) across urban, agricultural, and natural landscapes (Q37490910) (← links)
- Foraging traits modulate stingless bee community disassembly under forest loss (Q39178887) (← links)
- Variation in pollinator assemblages in a fragmented landscape and its effects on reproductive stages of a self-incompatible treelet, Psychotria suterella (Rubiaceae). (Q39273425) (← links)
- Forest bees are replaced in agricultural and urban landscapes by native species with different phenologies and life-history traits (Q42694894) (← links)
- The pollinator crisis: What's best for bees (Q45381496) (← links)
- Landscape-scale resources promote colony growth but not reproductive performance of bumble bees (Q46205087) (← links)
- Dimensions of biodiversity loss: Spatial mismatch in land-use impacts on species, functional and phylogenetic diversity of European bees (Q46248879) (← links)
- Foraging in an unsteady world: bumblebee flight performance in field-realistic turbulence (Q46451177) (← links)
- Landscape spatial configuration is a key driver of wild bee demographics (Q46503346) (← links)
- Plant-animal interactions in suburban environments: implications for floral evolution (Q46561987) (← links)
- Floral and nesting resources, habitat structure, and fire influence bee distribution across an open-forest gradient. (Q47352431) (← links)
- Using Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling to Analyze Bee Visitation in East Tennessee Crops as an Indicator of Pollination Services Provided by Honey Bees (Apis mellifera L.) and Native Bees (Q51315359) (← links)
- Roles of scale, matrix, and native habitat in supporting a diverse suburban pollinator assemblage. (Q51543983) (← links)
- The Plight of the Bees (Q52709447) (← links)
- Complementary habitat use by wild bees in agro-natural landscapes. (Q52742136) (← links)
- Impact of human disturbance on bee pollinator communities in savanna and agricultural sites in Burkina Faso, West Africa (Q56336945) (← links)
- Indirect effects of grazing intensity on pollinators and floral visitation (Q56431696) (← links)
- Biodiversity of man-made open habitats in an underused country: a class of multispecies abundance models for count data (Q56559953) (← links)
- The Bee Fauna of Residential Gardens in a Suburb of New York City (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) (Q56773381) (← links)