Research in pollination biology has focused on the interactions between animals and the flowers they visit for food reward. However, other selective agents, including predators, seed feeders and herbivores, may affect pollination systems. Because flowers are predictable food sources for a variety of species, flowers are also reliable sites at which predators can locate flower-visiting animals. Prominent among pollinators\u27 predators are beewolves (Philanthus spp), common sphecid wasps (Sphecidae) that prey almost exclusively on bees. My field work over three years indicates, first, that an area of approximately 50 square km surrounding a single bumblebee wolf (Philanthus bicinctus) aggregation had a low bumblebee (Bombus spp) density cau...
In southern England, Linaria vulgaris (common yellow toadflax) suffers from high rates of nectar rob...
Over two million commercial bumblebee colonies are used on an annual basis to pollinate around 20 cr...
1. Flower-dwelling predators may interfere in plant–pollinator interactions through changes in polli...
Flowering plants interact simultaneously with mutualistic pollinators and antagonistic herbivores su...
Studies have indicated that florivory and nectar robbing may reduce reproductive success of host pla...
Flower-visiting animals are constantly under predation risk when foraging and hence might be expecte...
This thesis investigates how intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect bumblebee foraging ecology and h...
Flower-visiting animals are constantly under predation risk when foraging and hence might be expecte...
Although the behaviour of animals facing the conflicting demands of increasing foraging success and ...
Invasive carnivorous plant species can impact the native invertebrate communities on which they prey...
Plant-pollinator interactions are ubiquitous in nature where both wild and domesticated pollinators ...
In plant communities, flowers are patchy in space and time over many scales. Flower-feeding animals ...
Lack of information concerning the affect of inflorescence size on insect foraging behaviors and whe...
Bumblebees (i.e. Bombus genus) are major pollinators of flowering wild plants and crops. Although ma...
<div><p>Bee species interactions can benefit plant pollination through synergistic effects and compl...
In southern England, Linaria vulgaris (common yellow toadflax) suffers from high rates of nectar rob...
Over two million commercial bumblebee colonies are used on an annual basis to pollinate around 20 cr...
1. Flower-dwelling predators may interfere in plant–pollinator interactions through changes in polli...
Flowering plants interact simultaneously with mutualistic pollinators and antagonistic herbivores su...
Studies have indicated that florivory and nectar robbing may reduce reproductive success of host pla...
Flower-visiting animals are constantly under predation risk when foraging and hence might be expecte...
This thesis investigates how intrinsic and extrinsic factors affect bumblebee foraging ecology and h...
Flower-visiting animals are constantly under predation risk when foraging and hence might be expecte...
Although the behaviour of animals facing the conflicting demands of increasing foraging success and ...
Invasive carnivorous plant species can impact the native invertebrate communities on which they prey...
Plant-pollinator interactions are ubiquitous in nature where both wild and domesticated pollinators ...
In plant communities, flowers are patchy in space and time over many scales. Flower-feeding animals ...
Lack of information concerning the affect of inflorescence size on insect foraging behaviors and whe...
Bumblebees (i.e. Bombus genus) are major pollinators of flowering wild plants and crops. Although ma...
<div><p>Bee species interactions can benefit plant pollination through synergistic effects and compl...
In southern England, Linaria vulgaris (common yellow toadflax) suffers from high rates of nectar rob...
Over two million commercial bumblebee colonies are used on an annual basis to pollinate around 20 cr...
1. Flower-dwelling predators may interfere in plant–pollinator interactions through changes in polli...