2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2012.08.008
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Pollinator community responses to the spatial population structure of wild plants: A pan-European approach

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Cited by 26 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Whether honeybees are antagonistic to other bee species was assessed by comparing the flower visitation rates of honeybees and wild bees (including bumblebees). Nielsen et al (2012) found a positive correlation between honeybee and bumblebee visitation rates, whereas the relationship between honeybees and solitary bees varied from being positive, negative or insignificant, depending on the plant species. Interaction between honey and wild bees be even more complex: analysing the effects of mass-flowering rapeseed (a flower visited by short-tongued pollinators) on the relative abundance of long-tongued and short-tongued bumblebees, Diekötter et al (2010) found that the density of longtongued bumblebees visiting long-tubed flowers decreased as the amount of rapeseed increased, leading to a distortion in plant-pollinator interactions.…”
Section: Interactions Between Wild and Domestic Pollinators In Weed-cmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Whether honeybees are antagonistic to other bee species was assessed by comparing the flower visitation rates of honeybees and wild bees (including bumblebees). Nielsen et al (2012) found a positive correlation between honeybee and bumblebee visitation rates, whereas the relationship between honeybees and solitary bees varied from being positive, negative or insignificant, depending on the plant species. Interaction between honey and wild bees be even more complex: analysing the effects of mass-flowering rapeseed (a flower visited by short-tongued pollinators) on the relative abundance of long-tongued and short-tongued bumblebees, Diekötter et al (2010) found that the density of longtongued bumblebees visiting long-tubed flowers decreased as the amount of rapeseed increased, leading to a distortion in plant-pollinator interactions.…”
Section: Interactions Between Wild and Domestic Pollinators In Weed-cmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Land use changes can alter the spatial structure of wild plant populations, which may in turn affect the attractiveness of flower aggregations to different groups of pollinators at different spatial scales (Nielsen et al 2012). Bees may be affected both locally by farm management and by the surrounding landscape.…”
Section: Assessing Competition For Spatial Use Of Landscape Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…; Nielsen et al . ). Such optimal foraging behaviour is likely to have consequences to the plant–plant interactions for pollinator visitation and likely to be a function of the density of floral resources (Kunin ; Hegland, Grytnes & Totland ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…; Nielsen et al . ). The scale dependency of pollinator assemblages and crop production has received considerable more attention.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The video camera was set up to record insect activity simultaneously on between one and three orchid spikes (individual plants of O. galilaea only produce one flowering spike) from 09:00 to 16:30 h over a period of 21 days. The number of flowers visited was determined and visits to different flowers by the same individual insect was treated as a separate event (Nielsen et al 2012). Each insect visitor was recorded and assigned to the best recognizable classification unit (Tscheulin and Petanidou 2010).…”
Section: Direct Observationsmentioning
confidence: 99%