L
Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian
Researcher at University of São Paulo
Publications - 89
Citations - 3245
Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian is an academic researcher from University of São Paulo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bee pollen & Pollen. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 89 publications receiving 2641 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Pollen composition and standardisation of analytical methods
Maria das Graças Ribeiro Campos,Stefan Bogdanov,Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian,Teresa Szczesna,Yanina Mancebo,Christian Frigerio,Francisco Ferreira +6 more
TL;DR: The aim of the present work is to review pollen composition and the analytical methods used for the evaluation of high quality bee pollen and propose quality criteria for bee pollen, hoping that in the future they will be used as world wide bee pollen standards.
Journal ArticleDOI
Chemical composition and botanical evaluation of dried bee pollen pellets
TL;DR: The data obtained using chemical and microscopic analysis can play an important role in the quality control of dry bee pollen pellets if the samples are mostly monofloral, due to the intraspecific differences from the taxa collected.
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Composition and properties of Apis mellifera honey: A review
Adriane Alexandre Machado De-Melo,Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian,M. T. Sancho,Ana Pascual-Maté +3 more
TL;DR: The use of honey is described as a biomonitor for collecting information about the environment, identifying environmental contamination and assessing the level of soil, water, plant and air pollution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quality and standardisation of Royal Jelly
Anna Gloria Sabatini,Gian Luigi Marcazzan,Maria Fiorenza Caboni,Stefan Bogdanov,Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian +4 more
TL;DR: Departamento de Alimentos e Nutricao Experimental, Faculdade de Ciencias Farmaceuticas da Universidade de Sao Paulo (USP), Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Journal Article
Composition of stingless bee honey: Setting quality standards
Bruno Henrique Sardinha de Souza,David W. Roubik,Ortrud Monika Barth,Tim A. Heard,Eunice Enríquez,Carlos Alfredo Lopes de Carvalho,Luís Carlos Marchini,Jean Locatelli,Livia Persano-Oddo,Ligia Bicudo de Almeida-Muradian,Stefan Bogdanov,Patricia Vit +11 more
TL;DR: The entomological origin of the honey was known for 17 species of Meliponini from Brazil, one from Costa Rica, six from Mexico, 27 from Panama, one of Surinam, two from Trinidad & Tobago, and seven from Venezuela as mentioned in this paper.