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Ellen D. Moss

Researcher at Newcastle University

Publications -  7
Citations -  393

Ellen D. Moss is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pollinator & Pollination. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 309 citations. Previous affiliations of Ellen D. Moss include University of Hull & University of Reading.

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The impact of over 80 years of land cover changes on bee and wasp pollinator communities in England

TL;DR: This work explores, for the first time, land cover changes in England over more than 80 years, and relates them to concurrent shifts in bee and wasp species richness and community composition, and provides an insight into how increases in habitat diversity may benefit species diversity.
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High-throughput monitoring of wild bee diversity and abundance via mitogenomics

TL;DR: It is shown that the metagenomic mining and resequencing of mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomics) can be applied successfully to bulk samples of wild bees, and species lists, biomass frequencies, extrapolated species richness and community structure were recovered with less error than in a metabarcoding pipeline.
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Pollination deficits in uk apple orchards

TL;DR: It is shown that solitary bee activity is high in orchards and that they could be making a valuable contribution to pollination, and fruit set and apple seed number were found to be suffering potential pollination deficits although these were not reflected in apple quality.
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Climate warming alters the structure of farmland tritrophic ecological networks and reduces crop yield.

TL;DR: Simulated climate warming affected species richness, significantly altered consumer–resource asymmetries and reduced network complexity, and the importance of considering the wider impacts of climate change on interacting species across trophic levels in agroecosystems is discussed.
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Investigating the impacts of climate change on ecosystem services in UK agro-ecosystems: An application of the DPSIR framework

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the standard DPSIR framework to establish broad-scale relationships, before developing two extensions to the initial DPSIR, which together formed a novel three-step approach.