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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial patterns of bee captures in North American bowl trapping surveys

TLDR
In this paper, the authors present results from seven studies of bowl traps placed in trapping webs, grids, and transects in four North American ecoregions (Mid-Atlantic, Coastal California, Chihuahuan Desert, and Columbia Plateau).
Abstract
. 1. Bowl and pan traps are now commonly used to capture bees (Hymenoptera: Apiformes) for research and surveys. 2. Studies of how arrangement and spacing of bowl traps affect captures of bees are needed to increase the efficiency of this capture technique. 3. We present results from seven studies of bowl traps placed in trapping webs, grids, and transects in four North American ecoregions (Mid-Atlantic, Coastal California, Chihuahuan Desert, and Columbia Plateau). 4. Over 6000 specimens from 31 bee genera were captured and analysed across the studies. 5. Based on the results from trapping webs and distance tests, the per bowl capture rate of bees does not plateau until bowls are spaced 3–5 m apart. 6. Minor clumping of bee captures within transects was detected, with 26 of 56 transects having index of dispersion values that conform to a clumped distribution and 39 transects having positive Green’s index values, 13 with zero, and only four negative. However, degree of clumping was slight with an average value of only 0.06 (the index ranges from −1 to 1) with only five values >0.15. Similarly, runs tests were significant for only 5.9% of the transects. 7. Results indicate that (i) capture rates are unaffected by short distances between bowls within transects and (ii) that bowls and transects should be dispersed throughout a study site.

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Traditional uses, phytochemistry and pharmacology of Ficus carica: A review

TL;DR: Ficus carica has emerged as a good source of traditional medicine for the treatment of various ailments such as anemia, cancer, diabetes, leprosy, liver diseases, paralysis, skin diseases, and ulcers and is a promising candidate in pharmaceutical biology for the development/formulation of new drugs and future clinical uses.
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Diverse landscapes have a higher abundance and species richness of spring wild bees by providing complementary floral resources over bees' foraging periods.

TL;DR: Diverse landscapes, such as ones with both open (grassland) and closed (woodland) semi-natural habitats, support spring wild bees by providing flowers throughout the entire foraging period and diverse niches to meet different species’ requirements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential Bias in Pan Trapping as a Function of Floral Abundance

TL;DR: Evaluated the effect of low and high floral resource availability generated by annual variations in precipitation on pan trap effectiveness at sites with and without floral resource removal via herbicide applications in Oklahoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a standardized Rapid Ecosystem Function Assessment (REFA)

TL;DR: This work identifies a set of important functions and proposes a Rapid Ecosystem Function Assessment (REFA), which enables standardized and comparable measurements of proxies for these functions that can be used at a large scale within and across studies.
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Wild bee abundance declines with urban warming, regardless of floral density

TL;DR: Bee abundance declined by about 41% per °C urban warming, and temperature was among the best predictors of bee abundance and community composition, and local impervious surface and floral density were also important predictors, although only large bees appeared to benefit from high floral density.
References
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Journal Article

Past: paleontological statistical software package for education and data analysis

TL;DR: PAST (PAleontological STatistics) as discussed by the authors is a simple-to-use software package for executing a range of standard numerical analysis and operations used in quantitative paleontology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops

TL;DR: It is found that fruit, vegetable or seed production from 87 of the leading global food crops is dependent upon animal pollination, while 28 crops do not rely upon animalPollination, however, global production volumes give a contrasting perspective.
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The Bees of the World

TL;DR: This extensive update of his definitive reference, Charles D. Michener reveals a diverse fauna that numbers more than 17,000 species and ranges from the common honeybee to rare bees that feed on the pollen of a single type of plant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical ecology: a primer on methods & computing

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis of the literature on community classification and Ordination Interpretation using data from the Ecological Community Data and SPECIES ABUNDANCE RELATIONS as a guide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington

TL;DR: Revised edition of the author's "Vegetation of Oregon and Washington", originally published by the U.S. Forest Service in 1973.
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