All Stories

  1. Experimental evidence of the importance of multitrophic structure for species persistence
  2. Biotic controls of plant coexistence
  3. Opposing effects of floral visitors and soil conditions on the determinants of competitive outcomes maintain species diversity in heterogeneous landscapes
  4. Exotic flies maintain pollination services as native pollinators decline with agricultural expansion
  5. On the inconsistency of pollinator species traits for predicting either response to land-use change or functional contribution
  6. Urbanisation and the loss of phylogenetic diversity in birds
  7. Sustained functional composition of pollinators in restored pastures despite slow functional restoration of plants
  8. The potential of electricity transmission corridors in forested areas as bumblebee habitat
  9. A common framework for identifying linkage rules across different types of interactions
  10. Functional identity and diversity of animals predict ecosystem functioning better than species-based indices
  11. The potential for indirect effects between co-flowering plants via shared pollinators depends on resource abundance, accessibility and relatedness
  12. Consequences of plant invasions on compartmentalization and species' roles in plant-pollinator networks
  13. The winners and losers of land use intensification: pollinator community disassembly is non-random and alters functional diversity
  14. Contribution of insect pollinators to crop yield and quality varies with agricultural intensification
  15. Biodiversity ensures plant-pollinator phenological synchrony against climate change
  16. Native bees buffer the negative impact of climate warming on honey bee pollination of watermelon crops
  17. Pollinator declines: reconciling scales and implications for ecosystem services
  18. Understanding Linkage Rules in Plant-Pollinator Networks by Using Hierarchical Models That Incorporate Pollinator Detectability and Plant Traits
  19. Historical changes in northeastern US bee pollinators related to shared ecological traits
  20. Wild Pollinators Enhance Fruit Set of Crops Regardless of Honey Bee Abundance
  21. Unraveling the Life History of Successful Invaders
  22. Consumer and motor innovation in the common myna: the role of motivation and emotional responses
  23. Climate-associated phenological advances in bee pollinators and bee-pollinated plants
  24. The paradox of invasion in birds: competitive superiority or ecological opportunism?
  25. Native Pollinators in Anthropogenic Habitats
  26. The Circe Principle: Are Pollinators Waylaid by Attractive Habitats?
  27. Deconstructing the native-exotic richness relationship in plants
  28. Exploring or Avoiding Novel Food Resources? The Novelty Conflict in an Invasive Bird
  29. Vegetation Response after Removal of the Invasive Carpobrotus Hybrid Complex in Andalucia, Spain
  30. Combined effects ofImpatiens glanduliferainvasion and landscape structure on native plant pollination
  31. Invasive plant integration into native plant-pollinator networks across Europe
  32. Breeding system and pollen limitation in two supergeneralist alien plants invading Mediterranean shrublands
  33. High Invasive Pollen Transfer, Yet Low Deposition on Native Stigmas in a Carpobrotus-invaded Community
  34. Contrasting effects of invasive plants in plant–pollinator networks