The Cool Down on MSN
Study finds Australian bees that nest in flower stems may be especially vulnerable to rising temperatures
They are already living with very little margin between daily conditions and their heat limits.
Scientists don’t know enough about the food habits of less social bees. Here’s why that urgently needs to change.
A major study of Australian native bees found that stem-nesting species may be the first to feel the impact of climate change ...
Bee species that nest in plant stems appear to be at the greatest short-term risk from increasing temperatures due to climate ...
New research on Australian native bees suggests that species nesting inside plant stems may be especially vulnerable to ...
Curtin University research has revealed that high densities of European honey bees could be harming Australian native bees' fitness by reducing their reproductive success and altering key traits ...
A study found bee nesting environments predict heat tolerance better than regional climate, reshaping climate risk models.
A few years ago, wild bee ecologist Kit Prendergast was searching for pollinators of an endangered wildflower when she spotted a strange bee. “I discovered the species while surveying a rare plant in ...
New Curtin University research has revealed that high densities of European honey bees could be harming Australian native bees’ ‘fitness’ by reducing their reproductive success and altering key traits ...
The bees best adapted to extreme heat may have the least room to cope with climate change, according to new research on nest ...
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