Книга: Жужжащие. Естественная история пчёл
Назад: Примечания
Дальше: Об авторе

Библиография

Adler, L. S. 2000. The ecological significance of toxic nectar. Oikos 91: 409–420.

Alford, D. V. 1969. A study of the hibernation of bumblebees (Hymenoptera: Bombidae) in Southern England. Journal of Animal Ecology 38: 149–170.

Allen, T., S. Cameron, R. McGinley, and B. Heinrich. 1978. The role of workers and new queens in the ergonomics of a bumblebee colony (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 51: 329–342.

Altshuler, D. L., W. B. Dickson, J. T. Vance, S. R. Roberts, et al. 2005. Short-amplitude high-frequency wing strokes determine the aerodynamics of honeybee flight. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102: 18213–18218.

Ames, O. 1937. Pollination of orchids through pseudocopulation. Botanical Museum Leaflets 5: 1–29.

Aristotle. 1883. History of Animals. Translated by R. Cresswell. London: George Bell and Sons.

Armbruster, W. S. 1984. The role of resin in angiosperm pollination: Ecological and chemical considerations. American Journal of Botany 71: 1149–1160.

Baker, H. G., and I. Baker. 1975. Studies of nectar-constitution and pollinator-plant coevolution. Pp. 100–140 in L. E. Gilbert and P. H. Raven, eds., Coevolution of Animals and Plants. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Balzac, J.-L. G. de. 1854. Oeuvres, vol. 2. Paris: Jacques Lecoffre.

Barfod, A., M. Hagen, and F. Borchsenius. 2011. Twenty-five years of progress in understanding pollination mechanisms in palms (Arecaceae). Annals of Botany 108: 1503–1516.

Beekman, M., and F. L. W. Ratnieks. 2000. Long-range foraging by the honey-bee, Apis mellifera L. Functional Ecology 14: 490–496.

Bernardello, G., G. J. Anderson, T. F. Stuessy, and D. J. Crawford. 2001. A survey of floral traits, breeding systems, floral visitors, and pollination systems of the angiosperms of the Juan Fernández Islands (Chile). Botanical Review 67: 255–308.

Bernardini F., C. Tuniz, A. Coppa, L. Mancini, et al. 2012. Beeswax as dental filling on a Neolithic human tooth. PLoS ONE 7: e44904. .

Bernhardt, P., R. Edens-Meier, D. Jocsun, J. Zweck, et al. 2016. Comparative floral ecology of bicolor and concolor morphs of Viola pedata (Violaceae) following controlled burns. Journal of Pollination Ecology 19: 57–70.

Berthier, S. 2007. Iridescences: The Physical Color of Insects. New York: Springer.

Bland, R. 1814. Proverbs, Chiefly Taken from the Adagia by Erasmus. London: T. Egerton, Military Library, Whitehall.

Boyden, T. 1982. The pollination biology of Calypso bulbosa var. americana (Orchidaceae): Initial deception of bumblebee visitors. Oecologica 55: 178–184.

Bradshaw, H. D., Jr., and D. W. Schemske. 2003. Allele substitution at a flower colour locus produces a pollinator shift in monkeyflowers. Nature 426: 176–178.

Brady, S. G., S. Sipes, A. Pearson, and B. N. Danforth. 2006. Recent and simultaneous origins of eusociality in halictid bees. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 273: 1643–1649.

Breitkopf, H., R. E. Onstein, D. Cafasso, P. M. Schülter, et al. 2015. Multiple shifts to different pollinators fuelled rapid diversification in sexually deceptive Ophrys orchids. New Phytologist 207: 377–389.

Brine, M. D. 1883. Jingles and Joys for Wee Girls and Boys. New York: Cassel and Company.

Brooks, R. W. 1983. Systematics and Bionomics of Anthophora — The Bomboides Group and Species Groups of the New World (Hymenoptera — Apoidea, Anthophoridae). University of California Publications in Entomology, vol. 98, 86 pp.

Buchmann, S. L., and G. P. Nabhan. 1997. The Forgotten Pollinators. Washington, DC: Island Press.

Budge, E. A. W., trans. 1913. Syrian Anatomy, Pathology, and Therapeutics; or, “The Book of Medicines,” vol. 1. London: Oxford University Press.

Burkle, L. A., J. C. Marlin, and T. M. Knight. 2013. Plant-pollinator interactions over 120 years: Loss of species, co-occurrence, and function. Science 339: 1611–1615.

Cameron, S. A. 1989. Temporal patterns of division of labor among workers in the primitively eusocial bumble bee Bombus griseocollis (Hymenoptera: Apidae). Ethology 80: 137–151.

Cameron, S. A., H. C. Lim, J. D. Lozier, M. A. Duennes, et al. 2016. Test of the invasive pathogen hypothesis of bumble bee decline in North America. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113: 4386–4391.

Cameron, S. A., J. D. Lozier, J. P. Strange, J. B. Koch, et al. 2011. Patterns of widespread decline in North American bumble bees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108: 662–667.

Cane, J. H. 2008. A native ground-nesting bee (Nomia melanderi) sustainably managed to pollinate alfalfa across an intensively agricultural landscape. Apidologie 39: 315–323.

_____. 2012. Dung pat nesting by the solitary bee, Osmia (Acanthosmioides) integra (Megachilidae: Apiformes). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 85: 262–264.

Cane, J. H., and V. J. Tepedino. 2016. Gauging the effect of honey bee pollen collection on native bee communities. Conservation Letters 10. .

Cappellari, S. C., H. Schaefer, and C. C. Davis. 2013. Evolution: Pollen or pollinators — Which came first? Current Biology 23: R316–R318.

Cardinal, S., and B. N. Danforth. 2011. The antiquity and evolutionary history of social behavior in bees. PLoS ONE 6: e21086. .

_____. 2013. Bees diversified in the age of eudicots. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 280: 1–9.

Cardinal, S., and L. Packer. 2007. Phylogenetic analysis of the corbiculate Apinae based on morphology of the sting apparatus (Hymenoptera: Apidae). Cladistics 23: 99–118.

Carreck, N., T. Beasley, and R. Keynes. 2009. Charles Darwin, cats, mice, bumble bees, and clover. Bee Craft 91, no. 2: 4–6.

Chapman, H. A., and A. K. Anderson. 2012. Understanding disgust. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1251: 62–76.

Chechetka, S. A., Y. Yu, M. Tange, and E. Miyako. 2017. Materially engineered artificial pollinators. Chem 2: 234–239.

Chittka, L., A. Schmida, N. Troje, and R. Menzel. 1994. Ultraviolet as a component of flower reflections, and the color perception of Hymenoptera. Vision Research 34: 1489–1508.

Chittka, L., and N. M. Wasser. 1997. Why red flowers are not invisible to bees. Israel Journal of Plant Sciences 45: 169–183.

Clarke, D., H. Whitney, G. Sutton, and D. Robert. 2013. Detection and learning of floral electric fields by bumblebees. Science 340: 66–69.

Cnaani, J., J. D. Thomson, and D. R. Papaj. 2006. Flower choice and learning in foraging bumblebees: Effects of variation in nectar volume and concentration. Ethology 112: 278–285.

Code, B. H., and S. L. Haney. 2006. Franklin’s bumble bee inventory in the southern Cascades of Oregon. Medford, OR: Bureau of Land Management, 8 pp.

Coleridge, S. 1853. Pretty Lessons in Verse for Good Children, with Some Lessons in Latin in Easy Rhyme. London: John W. Parker and Son.

Correll, D. S. 1953. Vanilla: Its botany, history, cultivation and economic import. Economic Botany 7: 291–358.

Crane, E. 1999. The World History of Beekeeping and Honey Hunting. New York: Routledge.

Crepet, W. L., and K. C. Nixon. 1998. Fossil Clusiaceae from the late Cretaceous (Turonian) of New Jersey and implications regarding the history of bee pollination. American Journal of Botany 85: 1122–1133.

Crittenden, A. N. 2011. The importance of honey consumption in human evolution. Food and Foodways 19: 257–273.

_____. 2016. Ethnobotany in evolutionary perspective: Wild plants in diet composition and daily use among Hadza hunter-gatherers. Pp. 319–340 in K. Hardy and L. Kubiak-Martens, eds., Wild Harvest: Plants in the Hominin and Pre-Agrarian Human Worlds. Oxford: Oxbow Books.

Crittenden, A. N., N. L. Conklin-Britain, D. A. Zes, M. J. Schoeninger, et al. 2013. Juvenile foraging among the Hadza: Implications for human life history. Evolution and Human Behavior 34: 299–304.

Crittenden, A. N., and S. L. Schnorr. 2017. Current views on hunter-gatherer nutrition and the evolution of the human diet. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 162(S63): 84–109.

Crittenden, A. N., and D. A. Zess. 2015. Food sharing among Hadza hunter-gatherer children. PLoS ONE 10: e0131996.

Cutler, G. C., C. D. Scott-Dupree, M. Sultan, A. D. McFarlane, et al. 2014. A large-scale field study examining effects of exposure to clothianidin seed-treated canola on honey bee colony health, development, and overwintering success. PeerJ 2: e652. .

D’Andrea, L., F. Felber, and R. Guadagnulo. 2008. Hybridization rates between lettuce (Lactuca sativa) and its wild relative (L. serriola) under field conditions. Environmental Biosafety Research 7: 61–71.

Danforth, B. N. 1999. Emergence, dynamics, and bet hedging in a desert mining bee, Perdita portalis. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 266: 1985–1994.

_____. 2002. Evolution of sociality in a primitively eusocial lineage of bees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99: 286–290.

Danforth, B. N., S. Cardinal, C. Praz, E. A. B. Almeida, et al. 2013. The impact of molecular data on our understanding of bee phylogeny and evolution. Annual Review of Entomology 58: 57–78.

Danforth, B. N., and G. O. Poinar, Jr. 2011. Morphology, classification, and antiquity of Melittosphex burmensis (Apoidea: Melittosphecidae) and implications for early bee evolution. Journal of Paleontology 85: 882–891.

Danforth, B. N., S. Sipes, J. Fang, and S. G. Brady. 2006. The history of early bee diversification based on five genes plus morphology. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103: 15118–15123.

Darwin, C. 1859. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. (Reprint of 1859 first edition.) Mineola, NY: Dover.

_____. 1877. The Various Contrivances by Which Orchids Are Fertilised by Insects, 2nd ed. New York: D. Appleton and Company.

Dean, W. R. J., W. R. Siegfried, and I. A. W. MacDonald. 1990. The fallacy, fact, and fate of guiding behavior in the Greater Honeyguide. Conservation Biology 4: 99–101.

Dicks, L. V., B. Viana, R. Bommarco, B. Brosi, et al. 2016. Ten policies for pollinators. Science 354: 975–976.

Dillon, M. E., and R. Dudley. 2014. Surpassing Mt. Everest: Extreme flight performance of alpine bumble-bees. Biology Letters 10. .

Di Prisco, G., D. Annoscia, M. Margiotta, R. Ferrara, et al. 2016. A mutualistic symbiosis between a parasitic mite and a pathogenic virus undermines honey bee immunity and health. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113: 3203–3208.

Doyle, A. C. 1917. His Last Bow: A Reminiscence of Sherlock Holmes. New York: Review of Reviews Company.

Doyle, J. A. 2012. Molecular and fossil evidence on the origin of angiosperms. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 40: 301–326.

Driscoll, C. A., D. W. Macdonald, and S. J. O’Brian. 2009. From wild animals to domestic pets, an evolutionary view of domestication. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106: 9971–9978.

Eckert, J. E. 1933. The flight range of the honeybee. Journal of Agricultural Research 47: 257–286.

Eilers E. J., C. Kremen, S. Smith Greenleaf, A. K. Garber, et al. 2011. Contribution of pollinator-mediated crops to nutrients in the hu- man food supply. PLoS ONE 6: e21363. .

Engel, M. S. 2000. A new interpretation of the oldest fossil bee (Hymenoptera: Apidae). American Museum Novitiates, no. 3296, 11 pp.

_____. 2001. A monograph of the Baltic amber bees and evolution of the apoidea (Hymenoptera). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 259, 192 pp.

Escobar, T. 2007. Curse of the Nemur: In Search of the Art, Myth, and Ritual of the Ishir. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.

Evangelista, C., P. Kraft, M. Dacke, J. Reinhard, et al. 2010. The moment before touchdown: Landing manoeuvres of the honeybee Apis mellifera. Journal of Experimental Biology 213: 262–270.

Evans, E., R. Thorp, S. Jepsen, and S. H. Black. 2008. Status Review of Three Formerly Common Species of Bumble Bee in the Subgenus Bombus. Portland, OR: Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, 63 pp.

Evans, H. E., and K. M. O’Neill. 2007. The Sand Wasps: Natural History and Behavior. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Fabre, J. E. 1915. Bramble-Bees and Others. New York: Dodd, Mead.

_____. 1916. The Mason-Bees. New York: Dodd, Mead.

Fenster, C. B., W. X. Armbruster, P. Wilson, M. R. Dudash, et al. 2004. Pollination syndromes and floral specialization. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 35: 375–403.

Filella, I., J. Bosch, J. Llusià, R. Seco, et al. 2011. The role of frass and cocoon volatiles in host location by Monodontomerus aeneus, a parasitoid of Megachilid solitary bees. Environmental Entomology 40: 126–131.

Fine, J. D., D. L. Cox-Foster, and C. A. Mullein. 2017. An inert pesticide adjuvant synergizes viral pathogenicity and mortality in honey bee larvae. Scientific Reports 7. .

Friedman, W. E. 2009. The meaning of Darwin’s “Abominable Mystery.” American Journal of Botany 96: 5–21.

Friis, E. M., P. R. Crane, and K. R. Pedersen. 2011. Early Flowers and Angiosperm Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Garibaldi, L. A., I. Steffan-Dewenter, R. Winfree, M. A. Aizen, et al. 2013. Wild pollinators enhance fruit set of crops regardless of honey bee abundance. Science 339: 1608–1611.

Gegear, R. J., and J. G. Burns. 2007. The birds, the bees, and the virtual flowers: Can pollinator behavior drive ecological speciation in flowering plants? American Naturalist 170. .

Genersch, E., C. Yue, I. Fries, and J. R. de Miranda. 2006. Detection of Deformed wing virus, a honey bee viral pathogen, in bumble bees (Bombus terrestris and Bombus pascuorum) with wing deformities. Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 91: 61–63.

Gess, S. K. 1996. The Pollen Wasps: Ecology and Natural History of the Masarinae. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Gess, S. K., and F. W. Gess. 2010. Pollen Wasps and Flowers in Southern Africa. Pretoria: South African National Biodiversity Institute.

Ghazoul, J. 2005. Buzziness as usual? Questioning the global pollination crisis. TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution 20: 367–373.

Glaum, P., M. C. Simayo, C. Vaidya, G. Fitch, et al. 2017. Big city Bombus: Using natural history and land-use history to find significant environmental drivers in bumble-bee declines in urban development. Royal Society Open Science 4: 170156.

Goor, A. 1967. The history of the date through the ages in the Holy Land. Economic Botany 21: 320–340.

Goubara, M., and T. Takasaki. 2003. Flower visitors of lettuce under field and enclosure conditions. Applied Entomology and Zoology 38: 571–581.

Goulson, D. 2010. Impacts of non-native bumblebees in Western Europe and North America. Applied Entomology and Zoology 45: 7–12.

Goulson, D., E. Nicholls, C. Botías, and E. L. Rotheray. 2015. Bee declines driven by combined stress from parasites, pesticides, and lack of flowers. Science 347. .

Goulson, D., and J. C. Stout. 2001. Homing ability of the bumblebee Bombus terrestris (Hymenoptera: Apidae). Apidologie 32: 105–111.

Graves, R. 1960. The Greek Myths. London: Penguin.

Greceo, M. K., P. M. Welz, M Siegrist, S. J. Ferguson, et al. 2011. Description of an ancient social bee trapped in amber using diagnostic radioentomology. Insectes Sociaux 58: 487–494.

Griffin, B. 1997a. Humblebee Bumblebee. Bellingham, WA: Knox Cellars Publishing.

_____. 1997b. The Orchard Mason Bee. Bellingham, WA: Knox Cellars Publishing.

Grimaldi, D. 1996. Amber: Window to the Past. New York: Harry N. Abrams.

_____. 1999. The co-radiations of pollinating insects and angiosperms in the Cretaceous. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 86: 373–406.

Grimaldi, D., and M. Engel. 2005. Evolution of the Insects. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Hallmann, C. A., R. P. B. Foppen, C. A. M. van Turnhout, H. de Kroon, et al. 2014. Declines in insectivorous birds are associated with high neonicotinoid concentrations. Nature 511: 341–343.

Hanson, T., and J. S. Ascher. 2018. An unusually large nesting aggregation of the digger bee Anthophora bomboides Kirby, 1838 (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in the San Juan Islands, Washington State. Pan-Pacific Entomologist 94: 4-16.

Hedtke, S. M., S. Patiny, and B. N. Danorth. 2013. The bee tree of life: A supermatrix approach to apoid phylogeny and biogeography. BMC Evolutionary Biology 13: 138.

Heinrich, B. 1979. Bumblebee Economics. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Henderson, A. 1986. A review of pollination studies in the Palmae. Botanical Review 52: 221–259.

Herodotus. 1997. The Histories. Translated by G. Rawlinson. New York: Knopf.

Hershorn, C. 1980. Cosmetics queen Mary Kay delivers a megabuck message to her sales staff: ‘Women can do anything.’ People, .

Hoballah, M. E., T. Gübitz, J. Stuurman, L. Broger, et al. 2007. Single gene-mediated shift in pollinator attraction in Petunia. Plant Cell 19: 779–790.

Hogue, C. L. 1987. Cultural entomology. Annual Review of Entomology 32: 181–199.

Houston, T. F. 1984. Biological observations of bees in the genus Ctenocolletes (Hymenoptera: Stenotritidae). Records of the Western Australian Museum 11: 153–172.

How, M. J., and J. M. Zanker. 2014. Motion camouflage induced by zebra stripes. Zoology 117: 163–170.

Ichikawa, M. 1981. Ecological and sociological importance of honey to the Mbuti net hunters, Eastern Zaire. African Study Monographs 1: 55–68.

Iwasa, T., N. Motoyama, J. T. Ambrose, and R. M. Roe. 2004. Mechanism for the differential toxicity of neonicotinoid insecticides in the honey bee, Apis mellifera. Crop Protection 23: 371–378.

Jablonski, P. G., H. J. Cho, S. R. Song, C. K. Kang, et al. 2013. Warning signals confer advantage to prey in competition with predators: Bumblebees steal nests from insectivorous birds. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 67: 1259–1267.

Jacob, F. 1977. Evolution and tinkering. Science 196: 1161–1166.

Jones, H. A. 1927. Pollination and life history studies of lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.). Hilgardia 2: 425–479.

Jones, K. N., and J. S. Reithel. 2001. Pollinator-mediated selection on a flower color polymorphism in experimental populations of Antirrhinum (Scrophulariaceae). American Journal of Botany 88: 447–454.

Kajobe, R., and D. W. Roubik. 2006. Honey-making bee colony abundance and predation by apes and humans in a Uganda forest reserve. Biotropica 38: 210–218.

Kerr, J. T., A. Pindar, P. Galpern, L Packer, et al. 2015. Climate change impacts on bumblebees converge across continents. Science 349: 177–180.

Kevan, P. G., L. Chittka, and A. G. Dyer. 2001. Limits to the salience of ultraviolet: Lessons from colour vision in bees and birds. Journal of Experimental Biology 204: 2571–2580.

Keynes, R., ed. 2010. Charles Darwin’s Zoology Notes and Specimen Lists from H.M.S. Beagle. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Kirchner, W. H., and J. Röschard. 1999. Hissing in bumblebees: Aninterspecific defence signal. Insectes Sociaux 46: 239–243.

Klein, A., C. Brittain, S. D. Hendrix, R. Thorp, et al. 2012. Wild pollination services to California almond rely on semi-natural habitat. Journal of Applied Ecology 49: 723–732.

Klein, A., B. E. Vaissière, J. H. Cane, I. Steffan-Dewenter, et al. 2007. Importance of pollinators in changing landscapes for world crops. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 274: 303–313.

Koch, J. B., and J. P. Strange. 2012. The status of Bombus occidentalis and B. moderatus in Alaska with special focus on Nosema bombi incidence. Northwest Science 86: 212–220.

Kritsky, G. 1991. Darwin’s Madagascan hawk moth prediction. American Entomologist 37: 205–210.

Krombein, K., and B. Norden. 1997a. Bizarre nesting behavior of Krombeinictus nordenae Leclercq (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae, Crabroninae). Journal of South Asian Natural History 2: 145–154.

_____. 1997b. Nesting behavior of Krombeinictus nordenae Leclercq, a sphecid wasp with vegetarian larvae (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae, Crabroninae). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 99: 42–49.

Krombein, K. V., B. B. Norden, M. M. Rickson, and F. R. Rickson. 1999. Biodiversity of the Domatia occupants (ants, wasps, bees and others) of the Sri Lankan Myrmecophyte Humboldtia lauifolia (Fabaceae). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 603: 1–34.

Larison B., R. J. Harrigan, H. A. Thomassen, D. I. Rubenstein, et al. 2015. How the zebra got its stripes: A problem with too many solutions. Royal Society Open Science 2: 140452.

Larue-Kontić, A. C., and R. R. Junker. 2016. Inhibition of biochemical terpene pathways in Achillea millefolim flowers differently affects the behavior of bumblebees (Bombus terrestris) and flies (Lucilia sericata). Journal of Pollination Ecology 18: 31–35.

Lee, D. 2007. Nature’s Palette: The Science of Plant Color. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Lewis-Williams, J. D. 2002. A Cosmos in Stone: Interpreting Religion and Society Through Rock Art. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.

Linnaeus, C. 1737. Critica Botanica. Leiden: Conradum Wishoff.

Litman, J. R., B. N. Danforth, C. D. Eardley, and C. J. Praz. 2011. Why do leafcutter bees cut leaves? New insights into the early evolution of bees. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 278: 3593–3600.

Livy. 1938. The History of Rome, Books 40–42. Translated by E. T. Sage and A. C. Schlesinger. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Archived online at Perseus Digital Library, Tufts University, .

Lockwood, J. 2013. The Infested Mind: Why Humans Fear, Loathe, and Love Insects. New York: Oxford University Press.

Longfellow, H. W. 1893. The Complete Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Lucano, M. J., G. Cernicchiaro, E. Wajnberg, and D. M. S. Esquivel. 2005. Stingless bee antennae: A magnetic sensory organ? BioMetals 19: 295–300.

Lunau, K. 2004. Adaptive radiation and coevolution — Pollination biology case studies. Organisms, Diversity & Evolution 4: 207–224.

Maeterlinck, M. 1901. The Life of Bees. Translated by A. Sutro. Corn- wall, NY: Cornwall Press.

Marlowe, F. W., J. C. Berbesque, B. Wood, A. Crittenden, et al. 2014. Honey, Hadza, hunter-gatherers, and human evolution. Journal of Human Evolution 71: 119–128.

McGovern, P., J. Zhang, J. Tang, Z. Zhang, et al. 2004. Fermented beverages of pre- and proto-historic China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101: 17593–17598.

McGregor, S. E. 1976. Insect Pollination of Cultivated Crop Plants. USDA Agriculture Handbook no. 496. Updated version available at US Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, .

Messer, A. C. 1984. Chalicodoma pluto: The world’s largest bee rediscovered living communally in termite nests (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 57: 165–168.

Meyer, R. S., A. E. DuVal, and H. R. Jensen. 2012. Patterns and processes in crop domestication: An historical review and quantitative analysis of 203 global food crops. New Phytologist 196: 29–48.

Michener, C. D. 2007. The Bees of the World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Michener, C. D., and D. A. Grimaldi. 1988. The oldest fossil bee: Apoid history, evolutionary stasis, and antiquity of social behavior. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 85: 6424–6426.

Miller, W. 1955. Old man’s advice to youth: Never lose your curiosity. Life, May 2, 62–64.

Mobbs, D., R. Yu, J. B. Rowe, H. Eich, et al. 2010. Neural activity associated with monitoring the oscillating threat value of a tarantula. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107: 20582–20586.

Moritz, R. F. A., and R. M. Crewe. 1988. Air ventilation in nests of two African stingless bees Trigona denoiti and Trigona gribodoi. Experientia 44: 1024–1027.

Muir, J. 1882a. The bee-pastures of California, Part I. Century Magazine 24: 222–229.

_____. 1882b. The bee-pastures of California, Part II. Century Magazine 24: 388–395.

Mullin, C. A., M. Frazier, J. L. Frazier, S. Ashcraft, et al. 2010. High levels of miticides and agrochemicals in North American apiaries: Implications for honey bee health. PLoS ONE 5: e9754. .

Nichols, W. J. 2014. Blue Mind. New York: Little, Brown.

Nininger, H. H. 1920. Notes on the life-history of Anthophora stanfordiana. Psyche 27: 135–137.

O’Neill, K. M. 2001. Solitary Wasps: Behavior and Natural History. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.

Ott, J. 1998. The Delphic bee: Bees and toxic honeys as pointers to psychoactive and other medicinal plants. Economic Botany 52: 260–266.

Packer, L. 2005. A new species of Geodiscelis (Hymenoptera: Colletidae: Xeromelissinae) from the Atacama Desert of Chile. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 14: 84–91.

Paris, H. S., and J. Janick. 2008. What the Roman emperor Tiberius grew in his greenhouses. Pp. 33–41 in M. Pitrat, ed., Cucurbitaceae 2008: Proceedings of the IXth EUCARPIA Meeting on Genetics and Breeding of Cucurbitaceae. Avignon, France: INRA.

Partap, U., and T. Ya. 2012. The human pollinators of fruit crops in Maoxian County, Sichuan, China. Mountain Research and Development 32: 176–186.

Peckham, G. W., and E. G. Peckham. 1905. Wasps: Social and Solitary. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Phillips, E. F. 1905. Structure and development of the compound eye of the honeybee. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 56: 123–157.

Plath, O. E. 1934. Bumblebees and Their Ways. New York: Macmillan.

Plath, S. 1979. Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams. New York: Harper and Row.

Poinar, G. O., Jr., K. L. Chambers, and J. Wunderlich. 2013. Micropetasos, a new genus of angiosperms from mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 7: 745–750.

Poinar, G. O., Jr., and B. N. Danforth. 2006. A fossil bee from early Cretaceous Burmese amber. Science 314: 614.

Poinar, G. O., Jr., and R. Poinar. 2008. What Bugged the Dinosaurs: Insects, Disease and Death in the Cretaceous. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Porter, C. J. A. 1883. Experiments with the antennae of insects. American Naturalist 17: 1238–1245.

Porter, D. M. 2010. Darwin: The botanist on the Beagle. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 61: 117–156.

Potts, S. G., J. C. Biesmeijer, C. Kremen, P. Neumann, et al. 2010. Global pollinator declines: Trends, impacts and drivers. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 25: 345–353.

Potts, S. G., V. L. Imperatriz-Fonseca, and H. T. Ngo, eds. 2016. The Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services on Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production. Bonn, Germany: Secretariat of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services.

Proctor, M., P. Yeo, and A. Lack. 1996. The Natural History of Pollination. Portland, OR: Timber Press.

Pyke, G. H. 2016. Floral nectar: Pollination attraction or manipulation? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 31: 339–341.

Ransome, H. M. 2004. The Sacred Bee in Ancient Times and Folklore. (Reprint of 1937 edition.) Mineola, NY: Dover.

Reinhardt, J. F. 1952. Some responses of honey bees to alfalfa flowers. American Naturalist 86: 257–275.

Roffet-Salque, M., M. Regert, R. P. Evershed, A. K. Outram, et al. 2015. Widespread exploitation of the honeybee by early Neolithic farmers. Nature 527: 226–231.

Ross, A., C. Mellish, P. York, and B. Crighton. 2010. Burmese amber. Pp. 208–235 in D. Penny, ed., Biodiversity of Fossils in Amber from the Major World Deposits. Manchester, UK: Siri Scientific Press.

Roubik, D. W., ed. 1995. Pollination of Cultivated Plants in the Tropics. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Roulston, T., and K. Goodell. 2011. The role of resources and risks in regulating wild bee populations. Annual Review of Entomology 56:293–312.

Rundlöf, M., G. K. S. Andersson, R. Bommarco, I. Fries, et al. 2015. Seed coating with a neonicotinoid insecticide negatively affects wild bees. Nature 521: 77–80.

Saunders, E. 1896. The Hymenoptera Aculeata of the British Islands. London: L. Reeve.

Savage, C. 2008. Bees: Natures Little Wonders. Vancouver, BC: Greystone Books.

Schemske, D. W., and H. D. Bradshaw, Jr. 1999. Pollinator preference and the evolution of floral traits in monkeyflowers (Mimulus). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 96: 11910–11915.

Schmidt. J. O. 2014. Evolutionary responses of solitary and social Hymenoptera to predation by primates and overwhelmingly powerful vertebrate predators. Journal of Human Evolution 71: 12–19.

_____. 2016. The Sting of the Wild. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Schwarz, H. F. 1945. The wax of stingless bees (Meliponidæ) and the uses to which it has been put. Journal of the New York Entomological Society 53: 137–144.

Schwarz, M. P., M. H. Richards, and B. N. Danforth. 2007. Changing paradigms in insect social evolution: Insights from halictine and allodapine bees. Annual Review of Entomology 52: 127–150.

Seligman, M. E. P. 1971. Phobias and preparedness. Behavior Therapy 2: 307–320.

Shackleton, K., H. A. Toufailia, N. J. Balfour, F. S. Nasicimento, et al. 2015. Appetite for self-destruction: Suicidal biting as a nest defense strategy in Trigona stingless bees. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 69: 273–281.

Slaa, E. J., L. Alejandro, S. Chaves, K. Sampaio Malagodi-Braga, et al. 2006. Stingless bees in applied pollination: Practice and perspectives. Apidologie 37: 293–315.

Sladen, F. W. L. 1912. The Humble-Bee: Its Life-History and How to Domesticate It. London: Macmillan.

Smith, A. 2012. Cash-strapped farmers feed candy to cows. CNN Money, .

Somanathan, H., A. Kelber, R. M. Borges, R. Wallén, et al. 2009. Visual ecology of Indian carpenter bees II: Adaptations of eyes and ocelli to nocturnal and diurnal lifestyles. Journal of Comparative Physiology A 195: 571–583.

Sparrman, A. 1777. An account of a journey into Africa from the Cape of Good-Hope, and a description of a new species of cuckow. In a letter to Dr. John Reinhold Forster, FRS Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 67: 38–47.

Srinivasan, M. V. 1992. Distance perception in insects. Current Directions in Psychological Science 1: 22–26.

Stableton, J. K. 1908. Observation beehive. School and Home Education 28: 21–23.

Stokstad, E. 2007. The case of the empty hives. Science 316: 970–972.

Stone, G. N. 1993. Endothermy in the solitary bee Anthophora plumipes: Independent measures of thermoregulatory ability, costs of warm-up and the role of body size. Journal of Experimental Biology 174: 299–320.

Strong, D. R., J. H. Lawton, and R. Southwood. 1984. Insects on Plants: Community Patterns and Mechanisms. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Sun, B. Y., T. F. Stuess, A. M. Humana, M. Riveros, et al. 1996. Evolution of Rhaphithamnus venustus (Verbenaceae), a gynodioecious hummingbird-pollinated endemic of the Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile. Pacific Science 50: 55–65.

Sutherland, W. J. 1990. Biological flora of the British Isles: Iris pseudacorus L. Journal of Ecology 78: 833–848.

Theophrastus. 1916. Enquiry into Plants, and Minor Works on Odours and Weather Signs. Translated by A. Hort. London: William Heinemann.

Thoreau, H. D. 1843. Paradise (to be) regained. United States Magazine and Democratic Review 13: 451–463.

_____. 2009. The Journal, 1837–1861. Edited by D. Searls. New York: New York Review Books.

Thorp, R. W. 1969. Ecology and behavior of Anthophora edwardsii. American Midland Naturalist 82: 321–337.

Tolstoy, L. (1867) 1994. War and Peace. New York: Modern Library.

Torchio, P. F. 1984. The nesting biology of Hylaeus bisinuatus Forster and development of its immature forms (Hymenoptera: Colletidae). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 57: 276–297.

Torchio, P. F., and V. J. Tepedino. 1982. Parsivoltinism in three species of Osmia bees. Psyche 89: 221–238.

VanEngelsdorp, D., D. Cox-Foster, M. Frazier, N. Ostiguy, et al. 2006. “Fall-Dwindle Disease”: Investigations into the causes of sudden and alarming colony losses experienced by beekeepers in the fall of 2006. Mid-Atlantic Apiculture Research and Extension Consortium (MAAREC) — Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group, 22 pp.

VanEngelsdorp, D., J. D. Evans, L. Donovall, C. Mullin, et al. 2009. “Entombed Pollen”: A new condition in honey bee colonies associated with increased risk of colony mortality. Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 101: 147–149.

Virgil. 2006. The Georgics. Translated by P. Fallon. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Wallace, Alfred Russel. 1869. The Malay Archipelago. New York: Harper and Brothers.

Watson, K., and J. A. Stallins. 2016. Honey bees and Colony Collapse Disorder: A pluralistic reframing. Geography Compass 10: 222–236.

Wcislo, W. T., L Arneson, K. Roesch, V. Gonzolez, et al. 2004. The evolution of nocturnal behaviour in sweat bees, Megalopta genalis and M. ecuadoria (Hymenoptera: Halictidae): An escape from competitors and enemies? Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 83: 377–387.

Wcislo, W. T., and B. N. Danforth. 1997. Secondarily solitary: The evolutionary loss of social behavior. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12: 468–474.

Wellington, W. G. 1974. Bumblebee ocelli and navigation at dusk. Science 183: 550–551.

Weyrich, L. S., S. Duchene, J. Soubrier, L. Arriola, et al. 2017. Neanderthal behaviour, diet, and disease inferred from ancient DNA in dental calculus. Nature 544: 357–361.

Whitfield, C. W., S. K. Behura, S. H. Berlocher, A. G. Clark, et al. 2007. Thrice out of Africa: Ancient and recent expansions of the honey bee, Apis mellifera. Science 314: 642–645.

Whitman, W. (1855) 1976. Leaves of Grass. Secaucus, NJ: Longriver Press.

Whitney, H. M., L. Chittka, T. J. A. Bruce, and B. J. Glover. 2009. Conical epidermal cells allow bees to grip flowers and increase foraging efficiency. Current Biology 19: 948–953.

Wille, A. 1983. Biology of the stingless bees. Annual Review of Entomology 28: 41–64.

Wilson, E. O. 2012. The Social Conquest of Earth. New York: Liveright.

Winston, M. L. 1987. The Biology of the Honey Bee. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Wood, B. M., H. Pontzer, D. A. Raichlen, and F. W. Marlowe. 2014. Mutualism and manipulation in Hadza-honeyguide interactions. Evolution and Human Behavior 35: 540–546.

Wrangham, R. W. 2011. Honey and fire in human evolution. Pp. 149–167 in J. Sept and D. Pilbeam, eds. Casting the Net Wide: Papers in Honor of Glynn Isaac and His Approach to Human Origins Research. Oxford: Oxbow Books.

Yeats. W. B. 1997. The Collected Works of W. B. Yeats. Vol. 1, The Poems, 2nd ed. Edited by J. Finneman. New York: Scribner.

Назад: Примечания
Дальше: Об авторе