1. Trap nests are artificially made nesting resources for solitary cavity-nesting bees and wasps and allow easy quantification of multiple trophic interactions between bees, wasps, their food objects and natural enemies. 2. We synthesized all trap nest studies available in the ISI Web of Science™ to provide a comprehensive overview of trap nest research and identify common practical challenges and promising future research directions. 3. Trap nests have been used on all continents and across climate zones and publication numbers have increased exponentially since the first studies in the 1950s. Originally used for detailed exploratory natural history observations, trap nests are now also an established method in hypothesis-driven ecology an...
1. The oil‐collecting bee Centris analis (Fabricius, 1804) is an important pollinator for the Neotro...
The decline of managed honeybees and the rapid expansion of mass-flowering crops increase the risk o...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
1. Trap nests are artificially made nesting resources for solitary cavity-nesting bees and wasps and...
Nesting resources structure native bee communities and the availability of suitable nests may enhanc...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
1. The decline of managed honeybees and the rapid expansion of mass-flowering crops increase the ris...
Urbanization is affecting arthropod communities worldwide, for example by changing the availability ...
Supporting and promoting invertebrate diversity within agricultural ecosystems has numerous benefits...
Wild bees are declining in intensively farmed regions worldwide, threatening pollination services to...
Wildflower strip plantings in intensive agricultural systems have become a widespread tool for promo...
Supporting and promoting invertebrate diversity within agricultural ecosystems has numerous benefits...
Excerpt: The technique of trap-nesting for wasps and bees by putting out strips of wood having a h...
Pollination by wild bees is a vital ecosystem process in natural and managed systems. Recent decline...
Cooperative breeding decreases the direct reproductive output of subordinate individuals, but cooper...
1. The oil‐collecting bee Centris analis (Fabricius, 1804) is an important pollinator for the Neotro...
The decline of managed honeybees and the rapid expansion of mass-flowering crops increase the risk o...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
1. Trap nests are artificially made nesting resources for solitary cavity-nesting bees and wasps and...
Nesting resources structure native bee communities and the availability of suitable nests may enhanc...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
1. The decline of managed honeybees and the rapid expansion of mass-flowering crops increase the ris...
Urbanization is affecting arthropod communities worldwide, for example by changing the availability ...
Supporting and promoting invertebrate diversity within agricultural ecosystems has numerous benefits...
Wild bees are declining in intensively farmed regions worldwide, threatening pollination services to...
Wildflower strip plantings in intensive agricultural systems have become a widespread tool for promo...
Supporting and promoting invertebrate diversity within agricultural ecosystems has numerous benefits...
Excerpt: The technique of trap-nesting for wasps and bees by putting out strips of wood having a h...
Pollination by wild bees is a vital ecosystem process in natural and managed systems. Recent decline...
Cooperative breeding decreases the direct reproductive output of subordinate individuals, but cooper...
1. The oil‐collecting bee Centris analis (Fabricius, 1804) is an important pollinator for the Neotro...
The decline of managed honeybees and the rapid expansion of mass-flowering crops increase the risk o...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...