Four British bumblebee species (Bombus terrestris, Bombus hortorum, Bombus ruderatus and Bombus subterraneus) became established in New Zealand following their introduction at the turn of the last century. Of these, two remain common in the United Kingdom (B. terrestris and B. hortorum), whilst two (B. ruderatus and B. subterraneus) have undergone marked declines, the latter being declared extinct in 2000. The presence of these bumblebees in New Zealand provides an unique system in which four related species have been isolated from their source population for over 100 years, providing a rare opportunity to examine the impacts of an initial bottleneck and introduction to a novel environment on their population genetics. We used microsatellit...
One of the primary reasons for the decline of some bumblebee species has been habitat loss and fragm...
The rapid decline in bumblebee populations within Europe has been linked to habitat loss through agr...
Bumblebees are important pollinators of food crops and wild plants, but their populations are in dec...
Four British bumblebee species (Bombus terrestris, Bombus hortorum, Bombus ruderatus and Bombus subt...
Four British bumblebee species (Bombus terrestris, Bombus hortorum, Bombus ruderatus and Bombus subt...
In early 1992, the European bumblebee, Bombus terrestris, was first seen in Tasmania and currently h...
This thesis compares the population genetics of two bumblebee species (B. muscorum and B. jonellus) ...
The population genetic structure of three rare and declining bumblebee species, Bombus muscorum, B. ...
The genetic structure of the earth bumblebee (Bombus terrestris L.) was examined across 22 wild popu...
Worldwide most pollinators, e.g. bumblebees, are undergoing global declines. Loss of genetic diversi...
Owing to habitat loss populations of many organisms have declined and become fragmented. Vertebrate ...
Habitat fragmentation may severely affect survival of social insect populations as the number of nes...
The worldwide decline of pollinators is an emerging threat and is a matter both for ecological and e...
New methods of analysing genetic data provide powerful tools for quantifying dispersal patterns and ...
The yellow-banded bumblebee Bombus terricola was common in North America but has recently declined a...
One of the primary reasons for the decline of some bumblebee species has been habitat loss and fragm...
The rapid decline in bumblebee populations within Europe has been linked to habitat loss through agr...
Bumblebees are important pollinators of food crops and wild plants, but their populations are in dec...
Four British bumblebee species (Bombus terrestris, Bombus hortorum, Bombus ruderatus and Bombus subt...
Four British bumblebee species (Bombus terrestris, Bombus hortorum, Bombus ruderatus and Bombus subt...
In early 1992, the European bumblebee, Bombus terrestris, was first seen in Tasmania and currently h...
This thesis compares the population genetics of two bumblebee species (B. muscorum and B. jonellus) ...
The population genetic structure of three rare and declining bumblebee species, Bombus muscorum, B. ...
The genetic structure of the earth bumblebee (Bombus terrestris L.) was examined across 22 wild popu...
Worldwide most pollinators, e.g. bumblebees, are undergoing global declines. Loss of genetic diversi...
Owing to habitat loss populations of many organisms have declined and become fragmented. Vertebrate ...
Habitat fragmentation may severely affect survival of social insect populations as the number of nes...
The worldwide decline of pollinators is an emerging threat and is a matter both for ecological and e...
New methods of analysing genetic data provide powerful tools for quantifying dispersal patterns and ...
The yellow-banded bumblebee Bombus terricola was common in North America but has recently declined a...
One of the primary reasons for the decline of some bumblebee species has been habitat loss and fragm...
The rapid decline in bumblebee populations within Europe has been linked to habitat loss through agr...
Bumblebees are important pollinators of food crops and wild plants, but their populations are in dec...