Követés
Jessica Forrest
Jessica Forrest
Associate Professor of Biology, University of Ottawa
E-mail megerősítve itt: uottawa.ca - Kezdőlap
Cím
Hivatkozott rá
Hivatkozott rá
Év
Toward a synthetic understanding of the role of phenology in ecology and evolution
J Forrest, AJ Miller-Rushing
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 365 …, 2010
7982010
Complex responses of insect phenology to climate change
JRK Forrest
Current opinion in insect science 17, 49-54, 2016
4292016
An examination of synchrony between insect emergence and flowering in Rocky Mountain meadows
JRK Forrest, JD Thomson
Ecological Monographs 81 (3), 469-491, 2011
3362011
Plant–pollinator interactions and phenological change: what can we learn about climate impacts from experiments and observations?
JRK Forrest
Oikos 124 (1), 4-13, 2015
3102015
Nesting habitat of ground‐nesting bees: a review
CM Antoine, JRK Forrest
Ecological Entomology 46 (2), 143-159, 2021
2242021
Contrasting patterns in species and functional‐trait diversity of bees in an agricultural landscape
JRK Forrest, RW Thorp, C Kremen, NM Williams
Journal of Applied Ecology 52 (3), 706-715, 2015
2182015
Flowering phenology in subalpine meadows: Does climate variation influence community co‐flowering patterns?
J Forrest, DW Inouye, JD Thomson
Ecology 91 (2), 431-440, 2010
1942010
Emergence of a mid‐season period of low floral resources in a montane meadow ecosystem associated with climate change
G Aldridge, DW Inouye, JRK Forrest, WA Barr, AJ Miller‐Rushing
Journal of Ecology 99 (4), 905-913, 2011
1902011
Interactions between bee foraging and floral resource phenology shape bee populations and communities
JE Ogilvie, JRK Forrest
Current opinion in insect science 21, 75-82, 2017
1862017
Demographic consequences of phenological shifts in response to climate change
AM Iler, PJ CaraDonna, JRK Forrest, E Post
Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 52 (1), 221-245, 2021
1642021
Pollination by wild bees yields larger strawberries than pollination by honey bees
G MacInnis, JRK Forrest
Journal of Applied Ecology 56 (4), 824-832, 2019
1322019
Explaining the apparent paradox of persistent selection for early flowering
EJ Austen, L Rowe, JR Stinchcombe, JRK Forrest
New Phytologist 215 (3), 929-934, 2017
1112017
Defence compounds in pollen: why do they occur and how do they affect the ecology and evolution of bees?
S Rivest, JRK Forrest
New Phytologist 225 (3), 1053-1064, 2020
852020
Consequences of variation in flowering time within and among individuals of Mertensia fusiformis (Boraginaceae), an early spring wildflower
J Forrest, JD Thomson
American Journal of Botany 97 (1), 38-48, 2010
812010
Plant size, sexual selection, and the evolution of protandry in dioecious plants
JRK Forrest
The American Naturalist 184 (3), 338-351, 2014
682014
Pesticide-induced disturbances of bee gut microbiotas
MZ Hotchkiss, AJ Poulain, JRK Forrest
FEMS Microbiology Reviews 46 (2), fuab056, 2022
592022
Asteraceae Pollen Provisions Protect Osmia Mason Bees (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) from Brood Parasitism
DM Spear, S Silverman, JRK Forrest
The American Naturalist 187 (6), 797-803, 2016
582016
Background complexity affects colour preference in bumblebees
J Forrest, JD Thomson
Naturwissenschaften 96 (8), 921-925, 2009
572009
Direct benefits and indirect costs of warm temperatures for high‐elevation populations of a solitary bee
JRK Forrest, SPM Chisholm
Ecology 98 (2), 359-369, 2017
552017
Pollinator experience, neophobia and the evolution of flowering time
J Forrest, JD Thomson
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 276 (1658), 935-943, 2009
482009
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