T
Tomás E. Murray
Researcher at Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg
Publications - 28
Citations - 1966
Tomás E. Murray is an academic researcher from Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Pollinator. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1598 citations. Previous affiliations of Tomás E. Murray include Teagasc & Queen's University Belfast.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Standard methods for maintaining adult Apis mellifera in cages under in vitro laboratory conditions
Geoffrey R. Williams,Cédric Alaux,Cecilia Costa,Tamás Csáki,Vincent Doublet,Dorothea Eisenhardt,Ingemar Fries,Rolf Kuhn,Dino P. McMahon,Piotr Medrzycki,Tomás E. Murray,Myrsini E. Natsopoulou,Peter J. Neumann,Randy Oliver,Robert J. Paxton,Stephen F. Pernal,Dave Shutler,Gina Tanner,Jozef J. M. van der Steen,Robert Brodschneider +19 more
TL;DR: The ultimate goal of this, and of all COLOSS BEEBOOK papers, is not to stifle science with restrictions, but rather to provide researchers with the appropriate tools to generate comparable data that will build upon current understanding of honey bees.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rarity and decline in bumblebees - : A test of causes and correlates in the Irish fauna
Úna Fitzpatrick,Tomás E. Murray,Robert J. Paxton,John Breen,Don Cotton,Veronica Santorum,Mark J. F. Brown +6 more
TL;DR: Irish data support the finding that rare and declining bumblebees are later nesting species, associated with open grassy habitats, and suggest that the widespread replacement of hay with silage in the agricultural landscape has played a major role in bumblebee declines.
Journal ArticleDOI
Conservation ecology of bees: populations, species and communities
TL;DR: The role of ecology in bee conservation at the levels of species, populations and communities is reviewed and ecological data will be central to integrating management strategies into a broader, landscape scale of dynamic, interconnected habitats capable of delivering bee conservation in the context of global environmental change.
Journal ArticleDOI
Urban areas as hotspots for bees and pollination but not a panacea for all insects
Panagiotis Theodorou,Panagiotis Theodorou,Rita Radzevičiūtė,Guillaume Lentendu,Guillaume Lentendu,Belinda Kahnt,Martin Husemann,Martin Husemann,Christoph Bleidorn,Josef Settele,Josef Settele,Oliver Schweiger,Ivo Grosse,Tesfaye Wubet,Tomás E. Murray,Robert J. Paxton +15 more
TL;DR: It is shown that urban areas have high diversity of bees but not other insects, and high pollination provisioning, relative to rural sites, and it is found that ecotones in insect-friendly green cover surrounding both urban and rural sites boost pollination.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cryptic species diversity in a widespread bumble bee complex revealed using mitochondrial DNA RFLPs
TL;DR: The RFLP approach to identify native fauna can underpin ecological studies of these important cryptic species as well as the impact of commercial bumble bees on them.