Biological Reviews, ISSN 1464-7931, 2012, Volume 87, Issue 3, pp. 661 - 685
Understanding how landscape characteristics affect biodiversity patterns and ecological processes at local and landscape scales is critical for mitigating...
international | beta diversity | belowground‐aboveground patterns | resilience and stability | multitrophic interactions | functional traits | conservation management | ecosystem functioning and services | spatial heterogeneity | landscape composition and configuration | insurance hypothesis | Ecosystem functioning and services | Belowground-aboveground patterns | Insurance hypothesis | Spatial heterogeneity | Beta diversity | Functional traits | Conservation management | Multitrophic interactions | Landscape composition and configuration | Resilience and stability | SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIPS | FOOD-WEB STRUCTURE | SOIL DECOMPOSER COMMUNITY | TROPICAL HABITAT GRADIENT | NATURAL ENEMY DIVERSITY | AGRI-ENVIRONMENT SCHEMES | DIFFERENT SPATIAL SCALES | EXPERIMENTALLY FRAGMENTED LANDSCAPE | LAND-USE INTENSITY | BIOLOGY | BIOLOGICAL-CONTROL AGENTS | belowground-aboveground patterns | Conservation of Natural Resources - methods | Animals | Plants | Biodiversity | Ecosystem | Environmental Monitoring - methods | Rural land use | Endangered species | Human beings | Biological diversity conservation | Protection and preservation | Influence | Influence on nature | Management | Landscape ecology | Ekologi | Ecology | different spatial scales | experimentally fragmented landscape | agri-environment schemes | natural enemy diversity | biological-control agents | land-use intensity | tropical habitat gradient | food-web str | species-area relationships | soil decomposer community
international | beta diversity | belowground‐aboveground patterns | resilience and stability | multitrophic interactions | functional traits | conservation management | ecosystem functioning and services | spatial heterogeneity | landscape composition and configuration | insurance hypothesis | Ecosystem functioning and services | Belowground-aboveground patterns | Insurance hypothesis | Spatial heterogeneity | Beta diversity | Functional traits | Conservation management | Multitrophic interactions | Landscape composition and configuration | Resilience and stability | SPECIES-AREA RELATIONSHIPS | FOOD-WEB STRUCTURE | SOIL DECOMPOSER COMMUNITY | TROPICAL HABITAT GRADIENT | NATURAL ENEMY DIVERSITY | AGRI-ENVIRONMENT SCHEMES | DIFFERENT SPATIAL SCALES | EXPERIMENTALLY FRAGMENTED LANDSCAPE | LAND-USE INTENSITY | BIOLOGY | BIOLOGICAL-CONTROL AGENTS | belowground-aboveground patterns | Conservation of Natural Resources - methods | Animals | Plants | Biodiversity | Ecosystem | Environmental Monitoring - methods | Rural land use | Endangered species | Human beings | Biological diversity conservation | Protection and preservation | Influence | Influence on nature | Management | Landscape ecology | Ekologi | Ecology | different spatial scales | experimentally fragmented landscape | agri-environment schemes | natural enemy diversity | biological-control agents | land-use intensity | tropical habitat gradient | food-web str | species-area relationships | soil decomposer community
Journal Article
Science, ISSN 0036-8075, 3/2013, Volume 339, Issue 6127, pp. 1608 - 1611
The diversity and abundance of wild insect pollinators have declined in many agricultural landscapes. Whether such declines reduce crop yields, or are...
Insect pollination | Pollinating insects | Beneficial insects | Fruit set | Crops | REPORTS | Plant insect relations | Pollen | Species | Figs | Pollination | BIODIVERSITY | POLLEN-LIMITATION | QUALITY | YIELD | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | ECOSYSTEM SERVICES | BENEFITS | Fruit - growth & development | Animals | Crops, Agricultural - growth & development | Insecta - physiology | Flowers - physiology | Bees - physiology | Research | Statistics | Analysis | Pollinators (Animals) | Plant reproduction | Animal populations | Wildlife management | Bees | Honey | Equivalence | Insects | Abundance | Flowers | Fruits | Biological Sciences | Naturvetenskap | Natural Sciences | Biologiska vetenskaper | Earth and Related Environmental Sciences | Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap
Insect pollination | Pollinating insects | Beneficial insects | Fruit set | Crops | REPORTS | Plant insect relations | Pollen | Species | Figs | Pollination | BIODIVERSITY | POLLEN-LIMITATION | QUALITY | YIELD | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | ECOSYSTEM SERVICES | BENEFITS | Fruit - growth & development | Animals | Crops, Agricultural - growth & development | Insecta - physiology | Flowers - physiology | Bees - physiology | Research | Statistics | Analysis | Pollinators (Animals) | Plant reproduction | Animal populations | Wildlife management | Bees | Honey | Equivalence | Insects | Abundance | Flowers | Fruits | Biological Sciences | Naturvetenskap | Natural Sciences | Biologiska vetenskaper | Earth and Related Environmental Sciences | Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap
Journal Article
Nature Communications, ISSN 2041-1723, 2015, Volume 6, Issue 1, pp. 7414 - 7422
There is compelling evidence that more diverse ecosystems deliver greater benefits to people, and these ecosystem services have become a key argument for...
plant diversity | fruit-set | productivity | pollen | european countries | abundance | decline | native bees | biodiversity conservation | ecosystem services | BIODIVERSITY | MANAGEMENT | FRUIT-SET | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | PRODUCTIVITY | POLLEN | VALUATION | NATIVE BEES | PLANT DIVERSITY | BENEFITS | ABUNDANCE | Agricultural management | Plant reproduction | Wildlife conservation | Crop production | Ecosystems | Crops | Pollinators | Conservation | Biodiversity | Agricultural economics | Bees | Pollination | Biological diversity | Endangered & extinct species | Species diversity | Threatened species | Agricultural production | Ecosystem services | Environmental Sciences | Biological Sciences | Biologi | Ecology | Naturvetenskap | Natural Sciences | Ekologi
plant diversity | fruit-set | productivity | pollen | european countries | abundance | decline | native bees | biodiversity conservation | ecosystem services | BIODIVERSITY | MANAGEMENT | FRUIT-SET | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | PRODUCTIVITY | POLLEN | VALUATION | NATIVE BEES | PLANT DIVERSITY | BENEFITS | ABUNDANCE | Agricultural management | Plant reproduction | Wildlife conservation | Crop production | Ecosystems | Crops | Pollinators | Conservation | Biodiversity | Agricultural economics | Bees | Pollination | Biological diversity | Endangered & extinct species | Species diversity | Threatened species | Agricultural production | Ecosystem services | Environmental Sciences | Biological Sciences | Biologi | Ecology | Naturvetenskap | Natural Sciences | Ekologi
Journal Article
Nature Communications, ISSN 2041-1723, 10/2015, Volume 6, Issue 1, p. 8568
Biodiversity loss can affect the viability of ecosystems by decreasing the ability of communities to respond to environmental change and disturbances....
BIODIVERSITY | HETEROGENEITY | BODY-SIZE | LAND-USE INTENSITY | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | BUTTERFLIES | SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION | AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION | DIVERSITY | MANAGED GRASSLANDS | COMMUNITY FUNCTIONAL-RESPONSES | Grassland | Coleoptera | Biota | Biodiversity | Bees | Heteroptera | Arachnida | Animals | Larva | Ecosystem | Lepidoptera | Agriculture | Hemiptera | Diptera | Germany
BIODIVERSITY | HETEROGENEITY | BODY-SIZE | LAND-USE INTENSITY | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | BUTTERFLIES | SUSTAINABLE INTENSIFICATION | AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION | DIVERSITY | MANAGED GRASSLANDS | COMMUNITY FUNCTIONAL-RESPONSES | Grassland | Coleoptera | Biota | Biodiversity | Bees | Heteroptera | Arachnida | Animals | Larva | Ecosystem | Lepidoptera | Agriculture | Hemiptera | Diptera | Germany
Journal Article
Nature, ISSN 0028-0836, 08/2016, Volume 536, Issue 7617, pp. 456 - 459
Many experiments have shown that loss of biodiversity reduces the capacity of ecosystems to provide the multiple services on which humans depend(1,2). However,...
PLANT | WEAKENS | IMPACT | HERBIVORE | RICHNESS | SERVICES | LAND-USE INTENSITY | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | PRODUCTIVITY | CONSEQUENCES | DIVERSITY | Grassland | Food Chain | Animals | Microbiology | Models, Biological | Insecta | Herbivory | Biomass | Plants | Biodiversity | Germany | Ecosystem services | Research | Ecological research | Biological diversity | Studies | Ecosystems | Biological Sciences | Miljövetenskap | Naturvetenskap | Biologi | Ecology | Natural Sciences | Ekologi | Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap | Earth and Related Environmental Sciences | Environmental Sciences
PLANT | WEAKENS | IMPACT | HERBIVORE | RICHNESS | SERVICES | LAND-USE INTENSITY | MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES | PRODUCTIVITY | CONSEQUENCES | DIVERSITY | Grassland | Food Chain | Animals | Microbiology | Models, Biological | Insecta | Herbivory | Biomass | Plants | Biodiversity | Germany | Ecosystem services | Research | Ecological research | Biological diversity | Studies | Ecosystems | Biological Sciences | Miljövetenskap | Naturvetenskap | Biologi | Ecology | Natural Sciences | Ekologi | Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap | Earth and Related Environmental Sciences | Environmental Sciences
Journal Article
Journal of Applied Ecology, ISSN 0021-8901, 6/2008, Volume 45, Issue 3, pp. 737 - 741
1. Pollinators are a functional group with high relevance for ensuring cross-pollination in wild plant populations and yields in major crops. Both pollinator...
Guest Editorial | Pollinating insects | Landscapes | Insect pollination | Bumblebees | Habitat fragmentation | Organic farming | Applied ecology | Crop ecology | Agroecology | Pollination | gene flow | agri‐environment schemes | spatial scales | butterflies | land use intensification | habitat management | ecosystem services | bees | habitat fragmentation | Gene flow | Land use intensification | Agri-environment schemes | Habitat management | Spatial scales | Ecosystem services | Bees | Butterflies | BIODIVERSITY | agri-environment schemes | POLLEN | COMMUNITIES | ABUNDANCE | DISPERSAL | ENHANCE | CROP POLLINATION | DENSITIES | ECOLOGY | BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Guest Editorial | Pollinating insects | Landscapes | Insect pollination | Bumblebees | Habitat fragmentation | Organic farming | Applied ecology | Crop ecology | Agroecology | Pollination | gene flow | agri‐environment schemes | spatial scales | butterflies | land use intensification | habitat management | ecosystem services | bees | habitat fragmentation | Gene flow | Land use intensification | Agri-environment schemes | Habitat management | Spatial scales | Ecosystem services | Bees | Butterflies | BIODIVERSITY | agri-environment schemes | POLLEN | COMMUNITIES | ABUNDANCE | DISPERSAL | ENHANCE | CROP POLLINATION | DENSITIES | ECOLOGY | BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Journal Article
Ecology Letters, ISSN 1461-023X, 08/2015, Volume 18, Issue 8, pp. 834 - 843
Global change, especially land‐use intensification, affects human well‐being by impacting the delivery of multiple ecosystem services (multifunctionality)....
land use | Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning | global change | ecosystem services | multifunctionality | Biodiversity-ecosystem functioning | Ecosystem services | Multifunctionality | Land use | Global change | PLANT-SPECIES RICHNESS | SERVICES | LANDSCAPE | TRADEOFFS | PRODUCTIVITY | ECOLOGY | DIVERSITY | TRAITS | USE INTENSITY | HISTORY | Grassland | Linear Models | Agriculture - methods | Biodiversity | Germany | Soil - chemistry | Environmental aspects | Ecosystems | Biological diversity | Agricultural ecosystems | Amplification | Grasslands | Composition | Environmental changes | Provisioning | Letter | Letters
land use | Biodiversity–ecosystem functioning | global change | ecosystem services | multifunctionality | Biodiversity-ecosystem functioning | Ecosystem services | Multifunctionality | Land use | Global change | PLANT-SPECIES RICHNESS | SERVICES | LANDSCAPE | TRADEOFFS | PRODUCTIVITY | ECOLOGY | DIVERSITY | TRAITS | USE INTENSITY | HISTORY | Grassland | Linear Models | Agriculture - methods | Biodiversity | Germany | Soil - chemistry | Environmental aspects | Ecosystems | Biological diversity | Agricultural ecosystems | Amplification | Grasslands | Composition | Environmental changes | Provisioning | Letter | Letters
Journal Article