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Gillian C. Lye

Researcher at University of Stirling

Publications -  16
Citations -  1827

Gillian C. Lye is an academic researcher from University of Stirling. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bumblebee & Population. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 16 publications receiving 1641 citations. Previous affiliations of Gillian C. Lye include University of Southampton.

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Decline and conservation of bumble bees

TL;DR: Suggested measures include tight regulation of commercial bumble bee use and targeted use of environmentally comparable schemes to enhance floristic diversity in agricultural landscapes to prevent further declines.
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Population structure and inbreeding in a rare and declining bumblebee, Bombus muscorum (Hymenoptera: Apidae)

TL;DR: The results suggest that surviving populations of this rare insect suffer from inbreeding as a result of geographical isolation, and implications for the conservation of social hymenopterans are discussed.
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Diet breadth, coexistence and rarity in bumblebees

TL;DR: Analysis of patterns of abundance and distribution in one of the most diverse bumblebee communities in Europe, found in the mountains of southern Poland, indicates that the majority of pollen collected by bumblebees is from Fabaceae, but that some bee species are much more heavily dependent on Fabaceae than others.
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Assessing the value of Rural Stewardship schemes for providing foraging resources and nesting habitat for bumblebee queens (Hymenoptera: Apidae)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors assessed the attractiveness of three different farmland habitat types (hedgerow, field margin and grassland), and the relative merits of respective land management prescriptions under the Scottish Rural Stewardship scheme to nest site searching and foraging bumblebee queens during the period of queen emergence and colony foundation.
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Using citizen science to monitor Bombus populations in the UK: nesting ecology and relative abundance in the urban environment

TL;DR: It is suggested that the common bumblebee species Bombus pascuorum may have declined over the past 20 years relative to other species, comprising ~21% of colonies discovered in a survey conducted in 1989–1991, but just 8–9% in 2007–2009, accompanied by a reduction in the proportion of nests on the ground surface.