39 results on '"McArt, Scott H"'
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2. tdsa: An R package for time‐dependent sensitivity analysis
3. Early spring orchard pollinators spill over from resource‐rich adjacent forest patches
4. Wild, Native Pollinators Forage in Forest Canopies
5. Correction to: Nearly half of spring-flying male Andrena bees consume pollen, but less than female conspecifics
6. Nearly half of spring-flying male Andrena bees consume pollen, but less than female conspecifics
7. Pathogen transport amplifies or dilutes disease transmission depending on the host dose‐response relationship
8. Eristalis flower flies can be mechanical vectors of the common trypanosome bee parasite, Crithidia bombi
9. Bumble bee (Bombus impatiens) survival, pollen usage, and reproduction are not affected by oxalate oxidase at realistic concentrations in American chestnut (Castanea dentata) pollen
10. Eristalis (Diptera: Syrphidae) Flower Flies are Potential Non-host Vectors of the Common Trypanosome Bee Parasite, Crithidia Bombi
11. Functional traits linked to pathogen prevalence in wild bee communities
12. Floral traits affecting the transmission of beneficial and pathogenic pollinator-associated microbes
13. Bees in the trees: Diverse spring fauna in temperate forest edge canopies
14. Crithidia bombi can infect two solitary bee species while host survivorship depends on diet
15. Within-Colony Transmission of Microsporidian and Trypanosomatid Parasites in Honey Bee and Bumble Bee Colonies
16. Dominant bee species and floral abundance drive parasite temporal dynamics in plant-pollinator communities
17. Honey bees and wild pollinators differ in their preference for and use of introduced floral resources
18. Landscape simplification shapes pathogen prevalence in plant‐pollinator networks
19. Pollen defenses negatively impact foraging and fitness in a generalist bee (Bombus impatiens: Apidae)
20. Comparative survival and fitness of bumble bee colonies in natural, suburban, and agricultural landscapes
21. Trait-Based Modeling of Multihost Pathogen Transmission: Plant-Pollinator Networks
22. Bee pathogen transmission dynamics: deposition, persistence and acquisition on flowers
23. Low maize pollen collection and low pesticide risk to honey bees in heterogeneous agricultural landscapes
24. Disease where you dine: plant species and floral traits associated with pathogen transmission in bumble bees
25. Maximizing pollinator diversity in willow biomass plantings: A comparison between willow sexes and among pedigrees
26. Landscape predictors of pathogen prevalence and range contractions in US bumblebees
27. High pesticide risk to honey bees despite low focal crop pollen collection during pollination of a mass blooming crop
28. Floral Scent Mimicry and Vector-Pathogen Associations in a Pseudoflower-Inducing Plant Pathogen System
29. Neighbours matter: natural selection on plant size depends on the identity and diversity of the surrounding community
30. Plant Defenses and Predation Risk Differentially Shape Patterns of Consumption, Growth, and Digestive Efficiency in a Guild of Leaf-Chewing Insects
31. Arranging the bouquet of disease: floral traits and the transmission of plant and animal pathogens
32. Plant genotypic diversity reduces the rate of consumer resource utilization
33. Leaf herbivory increases plant fitness via induced resistance to seed predators
34. Compensatory mechanisms for ameliorating the fundamental trade-off between predator avoidance and foraging
35. Relationships between arthropod richness, evenness, and diversity are altered by complementarity among plant genotypes
36. A direct comparison of the consequences of plant genotypic and species diversity on communities and ecosystem function
37. Summer dietary nitrogen availability as a potential bottom‐up constraint on moose in south‐central Alaska
38. Behavioral Responses of the Endemic Shrimp Halocaridina rubra (Malacostraca: Atyidae) to an Introduced Fish, Gambusia affinis (Actinopterygii: Poeciliidae) and Implications for the Trophic Structure of Hawaiian Anchialine Ponds
39. A Modified Method for Determining Tannin–Protein Precipitation Capacity Using Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE) and Microplate Gel Filtration
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