Bees Not to Be? Responses of Insect Pollinator Faunas and Flower Pollination to Habitat Fragmentation

[1]  G. Vaughton Pollination disruption by European honeybees in the Australian bird-pollinated shrubGrevillea barklyana (Proteaceae) , 1996, Plant Systematics and Evolution.

[2]  J. Conner,et al.  Effects of black mustard population size on the taxonomic composition of pollinators , 1995, Oecologia.

[3]  S. House Pollination success in a population of dioecious rain forest trees , 1993, Oecologia.

[4]  B. Lamont,et al.  Population fragmentation may reduce fertility to zero in Banksia goodii — a demonstration of the Allee effect , 1993, Oecologia.

[5]  M. Warren,et al.  Distributions of occupied and vacant butterfly habitats in fragmented landscapes , 1992, Oecologia.

[6]  W. Kunin Density and reproductive success in wild populations of Diplotaxis erucoides (Brassicaceae) , 1992, Oecologia.

[7]  B. Widén,et al.  Pollen limitation and distance-dependent fecundity in females of the clonal gynodioecious herb Glechoma hederacea (Lamiaceae) , 1990, Oecologia.

[8]  P. Sowig Effects of flowering plant's patch size on species composition of pollinator communities, foraging strategies, and resource partitioning in bumblebees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) , 1989, Oecologia.

[9]  M. Ramsey Differences in pollinator effectiveness of birds and insects visiting Banksia menziesii (Proteaceae) , 1988, Oecologia.

[10]  D. Ehrhardt,et al.  Density-dependent flowering phenology, outcrossing, and reproduction in Impatiens capensis , 1987, Oecologia.

[11]  N. Waser,et al.  Pollen precedence and stigma closure: a mechanism of competition for pollination between Delphinium nelsonii and Ipomopsis aggregata , 1986, Oecologia.

[12]  Juan J. Armesto,et al.  Community studies in pollination ecology in the high temperate Andes of central Chile II. effect of temperature on visitation rates and pollination possibilities , 1985, Plant Systematics and Evolution.

[13]  David W. Inouye,et al.  ENDANGERED MUTUALISMS: The Conservation of Plant-Pollinator Interactions , 1998 .

[14]  M. Aizen Influence of local floral density and sex ratio on pollen receipt and seed output: empirical and experimental results in dichogamous Alstroemeria aurea (Alstroemeriaceae) , 1997, Oecologia.

[15]  R. Menzel,et al.  POLLINATORS' STRATEGIES IN FINDING FLOWERS , 1997 .

[16]  D. Inouye,et al.  Pollinators, Flowering Plants, and Conservation Biology , 1997 .

[17]  W. Kunin Population size and density effects in pollination : Pollinator foraging and plant reproductive success in experimental arrays of Brassica kaber , 1997 .

[18]  R. Greenberg,et al.  Forest patches in tropical landscapes. , 1997 .

[19]  T. Brown,et al.  The population genetic consequences of habitat fragmentation for plants. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[20]  J. Ågren Population Size, Pollinator Limitation, and Seed Set in the Self‐ Incompatible Herb Lythrum Salicaria , 1996 .

[21]  L. Aarssen,et al.  Heterospecific pollen transfer between sympatric species in a midsuccessional old‐field community , 1996 .

[22]  R. Corlett,et al.  The conservation value of small, isolated fragments of lowland tropical rain forest. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[23]  P. Hall,et al.  Effect of Forest Fragmentation on Genetic Diversity and Mating System in a Tropical Tree, Pithecellobium elegans , 1996 .

[24]  Lars Chittka,et al.  Generalization in Pollination Systems, and Why it Matters , 1996 .

[25]  R. Didham,et al.  Insects in fragmented forests: a functional approach. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[26]  L. Harder,et al.  Ecology and evolution of plant mating. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[27]  Marcelo A. Aizen,et al.  Bombus ruderatus Fabricius, un nuevo Bombus para la Argentina (Hymenoptera: Apidae) , 1996 .

[28]  Gary Paul Nabhan,et al.  The Forgotten Pollinators , 1996 .

[29]  C. Herrera,et al.  Floral Traits and Plant Adaptation to Insect Pollinators: A Devil’s Advocate Approach , 1996 .

[30]  C. Murcia,et al.  Forest fragmentation and the pollination of neotropical plants. , 1996 .

[31]  V. B. Huryn Use of native New Zealand plants by honey bees (Apis mellifera L.): A review , 1995 .

[32]  S. Cunningham Ecological constraints on fruit initiation by Calyptrogyne ghiesbreghtiana (Arecaceae): FLORAL HERBIVORY, POLLEN AVAILABILITY, AND VISITATION BY POLLINATING BATS , 1995 .

[33]  L. Aarssen,et al.  Reduced seed set in Elytrigia repens caused by allelopathic pollen from Phleum pratense , 1995 .

[34]  L. Fahrig,et al.  Mosaic Landscapes and Ecological Processes , 1995, Springer Netherlands.

[35]  C. Herrera Microclimate and Individual Variation in Pollinators: Flowering Plants are More than Their Flowers , 1995 .

[36]  K. Paige,et al.  Inbreeding Depression, Environmental Stress, and Population Size Variation in Scarlet Gilia (Ipomopsis aggregata) , 1995 .

[37]  C. Murcia Edge effects in fragmented forests: implications for conservation. , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[38]  Judith L. Bronstein,et al.  The plant—pollinator landscape , 1995 .

[39]  R. Forman Land Mosaics: The Ecology of Landscapes and Regions , 1995 .

[40]  S. Smith,et al.  Pollination effectiveness and pollination efficiency of insects foraging Prosopis velutina in South-eastern Arizona , 1995 .

[41]  M. Aizen,et al.  HABITAT FRAGMENTATION, NATIVE INSECT POLLINATORS, AND FERAL HONEY BEES IN ARGENTINE, "CHACO SERRANO"' , 1994 .

[42]  William J. Bond,et al.  Do mutualisms matter? Assessing the impact of pollinator and disperser disruption on plant extinction , 1994 .

[43]  Ilkka Hanski,et al.  Metapopulation structure and migration in the butterfly Melitaea cinxia , 1994 .

[44]  S. McNaughton,et al.  Effects of resource distribution on animal-plant interactions , 1994 .

[45]  I. Hanski,et al.  Patch-occupancy dynamics in fragmented landscapes. , 1994, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[46]  Marcelo A. Aizen,et al.  Forest Fragmentation, Pollination, and Plant Reproduction in a Chaco Dry Forest, Argentina , 1994 .

[47]  L. Fahrig,et al.  Conservation of fragmented populations , 1994 .

[48]  W. Kunin Sex and the single mustard : population density and pollinator behavior effects on seed-set , 1993 .

[49]  D. Paton Honeybees in the Australian EnvironmentDoes Apis mellifera disrupt or benefit the native biota , 1993 .

[50]  B. Rathcke,et al.  Habitat fragmentation and plant-pollinator interactions , 1993 .

[51]  K. Brown,et al.  Resources and conservation of neotropical butterflies in urban forest fragments , 1993 .

[52]  K. W. Duncan,et al.  Competition between honey bees (Apis mellifera) and wasps (Vespula spp.) in honeydew beech (Nothofagus solandri var. solandri) forest , 1993 .

[53]  V. Eckhart Spatio-temporal variation in abundance and variation in foraging behavior of the pollinators of gynodioecious Phacelia linearis (Hydrophyllaceae) , 1992 .

[54]  S. House Population Density and Fruit Set in Three Dioecious Tree Species in Australian Tropical Rain Forest , 1992 .

[55]  D. Charlesworth,et al.  Evolutionary Interpretations of Differences in Pollen Tube Growth Rates , 1992, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[56]  T. Fleming 12 – How Do Fruit- and Nectar-Feeding Birds and Mammals Track Their Food Resources? , 1992 .

[57]  D. Roubik 11 – Loose Niches in Tropical Communities: Why Are There So Few Bees and So Many Trees? , 1992 .

[58]  A. M. Araújo,et al.  GRADIENTS IN BUTTERFLY SPECIES DIVERSITY IN AN URBAN AREA IN BRAZIL , 1992 .

[59]  P. Becker,et al.  More about euglossine bees in Amazonian forest fragments , 1991 .

[60]  B. Young,et al.  Do Tropical Bird‐Pollinated Plants Exhibit Density‐Dependent Interactions? Field Experiments , 1991 .

[61]  M. V. Price,et al.  Reproductive costs of self-pollination in Ipomopsis aggregata (Polemoniaceae) : are ovules usurped ? , 1991 .

[62]  M. Lerdau,et al.  Tropical deciduous forest: Death of a biome. , 1991, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[63]  T. Alerstam,et al.  Bird flight and optimal migration. , 1991, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[64]  E. Menges Seed Germination Percentage Increases with Population Size in a Fragmented Prairie Species , 1991 .

[65]  R. Hobbs,et al.  Biological Consequences of Ecosystem Fragmentation: A Review , 1991 .

[66]  G. Frankie,et al.  Nest variability in Centris aethyctera (Hymenoptera: Anthophoridae) in response to nesting site conditions , 1991 .

[67]  D. Marshall,et al.  MATE CHOICE IN PLANTS: An Anatomical to Population Perspective , 1991 .

[68]  D. Smith,et al.  African bees in the Americas: Insights from biogeography and genetics. , 1991, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[69]  A. Rescia,et al.  Stress and disturbance: vegetation dynamics in the dry Chaco region of Argentina , 1990 .

[70]  C. Horvitz,et al.  Spatiotemporal Variation in Insect Mutualists of a Neotropical Herb , 1990 .

[71]  P. Klinkhamer,et al.  Effects of plant size, plant density and sex differential nectar reward on pollinator visitation in the protandrous Echium vulgare (Boraginaceae). , 1990 .

[72]  Kamaljit S. Bawa,et al.  Plant-Pollinator Interactions in Tropical Rain Forests , 1990 .

[73]  D. Levin PROXIMITY‐DEPENDENT CROSS‐COMPATIBILITY IN PHLOX , 1989, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[74]  T. Seeley The honey bee colony as a superorganism. , 1989 .

[75]  D. Roubik,et al.  Ecology and natural history of tropical bees: Extant families, subfamilies, tribes, genera, and subgenera of the Apoidea: a partial checklist , 1989 .

[76]  Ola Jennersten Pollination in Dianthus deltoides (Caryophyllaceae): effects of habitat fragmentation on visitation and seed set , 1988 .

[77]  H. Pulliam,et al.  Sources, Sinks, and Population Regulation , 1988, The American Naturalist.

[78]  C. Herrera Variation in mutualisms : the spatio temporal mosaic of a pollinator assemblage , 1988 .

[79]  Dennis D. Murphy,et al.  Distribution of the Bay Checkerspot Butterfly, Euphydryas editha bayensis: Evidence for a Metapopulation Model , 1988, The American Naturalist.

[80]  C. Sobrevila EFFECTS OF DISTANCE BETWEEN POLLEN DONOR AND POLLEN RECIPIENT ON FITNESS COMPONENTS IN ESPELETIA SCHULTZII. , 1988, American journal of botany.

[81]  A. Sih,et al.  Patch Size, Pollinator Behavior, and Pollinator Limitation in Catnip. , 1987, Ecology.

[82]  C. Herrera Components of pollinator "quality": comparative analysis of a diverse insect assemblage , 1987 .

[83]  G. Powell,et al.  Population dynamics of male euglossine bees in Amazonian forest fragments , 1987 .

[84]  E. E. Spears,et al.  Island and mainland pollination ecology of Centrosema virginiamum and Opuntia stricta , 1987 .

[85]  Pedro Jordano,et al.  Patterns of Mutualistic Interactions in Pollination and Seed Dispersal: Connectance, Dependence Asymmetries, and Coevolution , 1987, The American Naturalist.

[86]  M. Kwak Pollination and pollen flow disturbed by honeybees in bumblebee-pollinated Rhinanthus populations? , 1987 .

[87]  P. Feinsinger Approaches to nectarivore - plant interactions in the new world , 1987 .

[88]  E. Bucher Herbivory in arid and semi - arid regions in argentina , 1987 .

[89]  Jan P. Bakker,et al.  Disturbance in Grasslands , 1987, Geobotany.

[90]  D. Roubik,et al.  Sporadic food competition with the African honey bee: projected impact on neotropical social bees , 1986, Journal of Tropical Ecology.

[91]  M. Soulé,et al.  Conservation Biology: The Science of Scarcity and Diversity , 1986 .

[92]  M. Gilpin,et al.  Minimum viable populations : Processes of species extinction , 1986 .

[93]  G. Powell,et al.  Edge and other effects of isolation on Amazon forest fragments , 1986 .

[94]  F. Ledig Heterozygosity, heterosis, and fitness in outbreeding plants. , 1986 .

[95]  Friedrich G. Barth,et al.  Insects and Flowers@@@Insects and Flowers, the Biology of a Partnership. , 1986 .

[96]  S. H. Bullock Breeding Systems in the Flora of a Tropical Deciduous Forest in Mexico , 1985 .

[97]  M. D. Loveless,et al.  ECOLOGICAL DETERMINANTS OF GENETIC STRUCTURE IN PLANT POPULATIONS , 1984 .

[98]  Thomas D. Lee Patterns of Fruit Maturation: A Gametophyte Competition Hypothesis , 1984, The American Naturalist.

[99]  D. Levin INBREEDING DEPRESSION AND PROXIMITY‐DEPENDENT CROSSING SUCCESS IN PHLOX DRUMMONDII , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[100]  Daniel H. Janzen,et al.  No Park Is an Island: Increase in Interference from Outside as Park Size Decreases , 1983 .

[101]  J. Schmitt DENSITY‐DEPENDENT POLLINATOR FORAGING, FLOWERING PHENOLOGY, AND TEMPORAL POLLEN DISPERSAL PATTERNS IN LINANTHUS BICOLOR , 1983, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[102]  D. Roubik Experimental Community Studies: Time‐Series Tests of Competition between African and Neotropical Bees , 1983 .

[103]  William M. Schaffer,et al.  Competition for nectar between introduced honey bees and native North American bees and ants. , 1983 .

[104]  H. Ginsberg Foraging Ecology of Bees in an Old Field , 1983 .

[105]  S. Handel CHAPTER 8 – Pollination Ecology, Plant Population Structure, and Gene Flow , 1983 .

[106]  C. Jones,et al.  Handbook of experimental pollination biology , 1983 .

[107]  T. Seeley,et al.  FORAGING STRATEGY OF HONEYBEE COLONIES IN A TEMPERATE DECIDUOUS FOREST , 1982 .

[108]  Daniel Simberloff,et al.  Refuge Design and Island Biogeographic Theory: Effects of Fragmentation , 1982, The American Naturalist.

[109]  P. Bierzychudek Pollinator Limitation of Plant Reproductive Effort , 1981, The American Naturalist.

[110]  J. Thomson Spatial and Temporal Components of Resource Assessment by Flower-Feeding Insects , 1981 .

[111]  P. Feinsinger,et al.  PLANT-HUMMINGBIRD INTERACTIONS: EFFECTS OF ISLAND SIZE AND DEGREE OF SPECIALIZATION ON POLLINATION , 1980 .

[112]  D. Roubik Foraging Behavior of Competing Africanized Honeybees and Stingless Bees , 1980 .

[113]  D. Simberloff,et al.  Conservation Biology: An Evolutionary-Ecological Perspective , 1980 .

[114]  D. Mulcahy The Rise of the Angiosperms: A Genecological Factor , 1979, Science.

[115]  J. Gurevitch,et al.  Competition, Foraging Energetics, and the Cost of Sociality in Three Species of Bees , 1979 .

[116]  J. Silander Density-Dependent Control of Reproductive Success in Cassia biflora , 1978 .

[117]  D. Roubik,et al.  Competitive Interactions Between Neotropical Pollinators and Africanized Honey Bees , 1978, Science.

[118]  O. Taylor The Past and Possible Future Spread of Africanized Honeybees in the Americas , 1977 .

[119]  P. Feinsinger Organization of a Tropical Guild of Nectarivorous Birds , 1976 .

[120]  D. P. Fowler,et al.  Inbreeding in neighboring trees in two White Spruce populations. , 1976 .

[121]  P. Kevan Pollination and Environmental Conservation , 1975, Environmental Conservation.

[122]  C. Michener The Brazilian bee problem. , 1975, Annual review of entomology.

[123]  K. Bawa BREEDING SYSTEMS OF TREE SPECIES OF A LOWLAND TROPICAL COMMUNITY , 1974, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[124]  D. Levin,et al.  Gene Flow in Seed Plants , 1974 .

[125]  C. Michener The Brazilian Honeybee , 1973 .

[126]  D. Janzen Euglossine Bees as Long-Distance Pollinators of Tropical Plants , 1971, Science.

[127]  C. Kasper,et al.  Carcinogen and Microsomal Membrane Interactions: Changes in Membrane Density and Ability to Bind Nucleic Acids , 1971, Science.

[128]  Knut Faegri,et al.  The principles of pollination ecology , 1967 .