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Ignasi Bartomeus

Researcher at Spanish National Research Council

Publications -  136
Citations -  10519

Ignasi Bartomeus is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pollinator & Pollination. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 117 publications receiving 7795 citations. Previous affiliations of Ignasi Bartomeus include Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences & Autonomous University of Barcelona.

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Wild Pollinators Enhance Fruit Set of Crops Regardless of Honey Bee Abundance

Lucas Alejandro Garibaldi, +54 more
- 29 Mar 2013 - 
TL;DR: Overall, wild insects pollinated crops more effectively; an increase in wild insect visitation enhanced fruit set by twice as much as an equivalent increase in honey bee visitation.
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Delivery of crop pollination services is an insufficient argument for wild pollinator conservation

David Kleijn, +58 more
TL;DR: It is shown that, while the contribution of wild bees to crop production is significant, service delivery is restricted to a limited subset of all known bee species, suggesting that cost-effective management strategies to promote crop pollination should target a different set of species than management Strategies to promote threatened bees.
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Non-bee insects are important contributors to global crop pollination

Romina Rader, +59 more
TL;DR: It is shown that non-bee insect pollinators play a significant role in global crop production and respond differently than bees to landscape structure, probably making their crop pollination services more robust to changes in land use.
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Native Pollinators in Anthropogenic Habitats

TL;DR: There is a need for studies of pollinator species composition and relative abundance, rather than simply species richness and aggregate abundance, to identify the species that are lost and gained with increasing land-use change.
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Historical changes in northeastern US bee pollinators related to shared ecological traits

TL;DR: A long-term study of relative rates of change for an entire regional bee fauna in the northeastern United States, based on >30,000 museum records representing 438 species shows that despite marked increases in human population density and large changes in anthropogenic land use, aggregate native species richness declines were modest outside of the genus Bombus.