The gut microbiota of bumblebees. [PDF]
Hammer TJ, Le E, Martin AN, Moran NA.
europepmc +1 more source
Network Centrality as an Indicator for Pollinator Parasite Transmission via Flowers. [PDF]
Piot N, Smagghe G, Meeus I.
europepmc +1 more source
The Gut Microbiome of Two Wild Bumble Bee Species Native of South America: Bombus pauloensis and Bombus bellicosus. [PDF]
Fernandez de Landa G +9 more
europepmc +1 more source
A guide to sunflowers: floral resource nutrition for bee health and key pollination syndromes. [PDF]
Husband S +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Host Barriers Limit Viral Spread in a Spillover Host: A Study of Deformed Wing Virus in the Bumblebee Bombus terrestris. [PDF]
Streicher T +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Genome assemblies of two bumble bee species: Bombus sonorus and Bombus vosnesenskii. [PDF]
Ballare KM +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
The micro-parasites present in the Apidae pollinator community are mostly multi-host pathogens. To study the impact of these multi-host pathogens on the Apidae pollinator community, as a driver of wild bee decline, pathological studies are needed for different hosts.
Niels Piot, Ivan Meeus, Guy Smagghe
exaly +4 more sources
Long‐term prevalence of the protists C rithidia bombi and A picystis bombi and detection of the microsporidium N osema bombi in invasive bumble bees [PDF]
An initial survey in 2009 carried out at a site in northwestern Patagonia region, Argentina, revealed for the first time in South America the presence of the flagellate Crithidia bombi and the neogregarine Apicystis bombi, two pathogens associated with the Palaearctic invasive bumble bee Bombus terrestris.
Santiago Plischuk +2 more
exaly +4 more sources
Worldwide declines in critical hymenopteran pollinators, such as bumble bees and honey bees, in recent decades have sparked a surge in research aimed at identifying the factors behind these declines.
CARLOS E Lange, Santiago Plischuk
exaly +3 more sources

