Results 231 to 240 of about 16,616 (276)
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Allergy to bumblebees

Current Opinion in Allergy & Clinical Immunology, 2006
Field stings by bumblebees are uncommon because of the habitat and nonaggressiveness of these insects. More stings have been reported in the Netherlands because of the increasing use of bumblebees in flowering industries such as tomato growing. The purpose of this review is to summarize the recent literature concerning bumblebee anaphylaxis and ...
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Allergy to bumblebee venom

Current Opinion in Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2001
Allergy to bumblebee venom is a rare form of Hymenoptera venom allergy. Because bumblebees are increasingly used for the pollination of greenhouse plants, the prevalence of this Hymenoptera allergy has increased during the past decade. The clinical presentation, diagnosis and therapy of bumblebee venom allergy are similar to other Hymenoptera venom ...
C, Bucher, P, Korner, B, Wüthrich
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Abuzz with bumblebee genomes

Nature Reviews Genetics, 2020
A study in Molecular Biology and Evolution reports de novo genome sequences for 17 bumblebee species spanning all 15 subgenera. This valuable resource should provide a deeper biological understanding of these commercially and ecologically important pollinators.
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Projected decline in European bumblebee populations in the twenty-first century

Nature, 2023
G. Ghisbain   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Bumblebees adapt for turbulence

Journal of Experimental Biology, 2017
![Graphic][1] Everyone has heard the myth that bumblebees defy the laws of physics when they fly. Of course, we know that this is not the case, but we still know surprisingly little about how bumblebees fly in outdoor environments, where the weather can change abruptly.
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Bumblebee vision

2008
Animals live in diverse habitats that vary in their light spectral quality. In terrestrial habitats the most extreme differences in spectral light quality occur between low and high altitudes, and between open habitats like grassland and dense forest (Endler 1993).
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Bumblebees as Pollinators

2009
Abstract Darwin was fascinated by pollination and by bees, and particularly by bumblebees (or humble-bees, as he knew them). His prodigious correspondence is littered with descriptions of his observations on the interactions between bees and flowers; the quote above follows his inaccurate prediction that nectar-robbing honeybees on ...
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Bumblebee

African American Review, 2018
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