Rachael Winfree

Rachael Winfree

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

H-index: 50

North America-United States

About Rachael Winfree

Rachael Winfree, With an exceptional h-index of 50 and a recent h-index of 46 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, specializes in the field of ecology, biodiversity, pollination, ecosystem services.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Wild insects and honey bees are equally important to crop yields in a global analysis

Geometric effects of fragmentation are likely to mitigate diversity loss following habitat destruction in real‐world landscapes

Predicting plant–pollinator interactions: concepts, methods, and challenges

Rare and declining bee species are key to consistent pollination of wildflowers and crops across large spatial scales

CropPol: A dynamic, open and global database on crop pollination

The contribution of plant spatial arrangement to bumble bee flower constancy

Greater bee diversity is needed to maintain crop pollination over time

Crop visitation by wild bees declines over an 8‐year time series: A dramatic trend, or just dramatic between‐year variation?

Rachael Winfree Information

University

Position

Professor of Ecology Evolution and Natural Resources

Citations(all)

27418

Citations(since 2020)

15315

Cited By

17825

hIndex(all)

50

hIndex(since 2020)

46

i10Index(all)

69

i10Index(since 2020)

66

Email

University Profile Page

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Google Scholar

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Rachael Winfree Skills & Research Interests

ecology

biodiversity

pollination

ecosystem services

Top articles of Rachael Winfree

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Wild insects and honey bees are equally important to crop yields in a global analysis

Global Ecology and Biogeography

James Reilly

Ignasi Bartomeus

Dylan Simpson

Alfonso Allen‐Perkins

Lucas Garibaldi

...

2024/4

Geometric effects of fragmentation are likely to mitigate diversity loss following habitat destruction in real‐world landscapes

Global Ecology and Biogeography

Colleen Smith

Juan A Bonachela

Dylan T Simpson

Natalie J Lemanski

Rachael Winfree

2024/5

Predicting plant–pollinator interactions: concepts, methods, and challenges

Guadalupe Peralta

Paul J CaraDonna

Demetra Rakosy

Jochen Fründ

María P Pascual Tudanca

...

2024/1/22

Rare and declining bee species are key to consistent pollination of wildflowers and crops across large spatial scales

Ecology

Mark A Genung

James Reilly

Neal M Williams

Andrew Buderi

Joel Gardner

...

2023/2

CropPol: A dynamic, open and global database on crop pollination

Alfonso Allen‐Perkins

Ainhoa Magrach

Matteo Dainese

Lucas A Garibaldi

David Kleijn

...

2022/3

The contribution of plant spatial arrangement to bumble bee flower constancy

Oecologia

Bethanne Bruninga-Socolar

Rachael Winfree

Elizabeth E Crone

2022/2

Greater bee diversity is needed to maintain crop pollination over time

Nature Ecology & Evolution

Natalie J Lemanski

Neal M Williams

Rachael Winfree

2022/10

Crop visitation by wild bees declines over an 8‐year time series: A dramatic trend, or just dramatic between‐year variation?

Insect Conservation and Diversity

Andrew H Aldercotte

Dylan T Simpson

Rachael Winfree

2022/9

Price equations for understanding the response of ecosystem function to community change

The American Naturalist

Tina Harrison

Rachael Winfree

Mark A Genung

2022/8/1

Many bee species, including rare species, are important for function of entire plant–pollinator networks

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Dylan T Simpson

Lucia R Weinman

Mark A Genung

Michael Roswell

Molly MacLeod

...

2022/4/13

Seeing through the static: the temporal dimension of plant–animal mutualistic interactions

Paul J CaraDonna

Laura A Burkle

Benjamin Schwarz

Julian Resasco

Tiffany M Knight

...

2021/1

Forest-associated bee species persist amid forest loss and regrowth in eastern North America

Biological Conservation

Colleen Smith

Tina Harrison

Joel Gardner

Rachael Winfree

2021/8/1

Wild insect diversity increases inter-annual stability in global crop pollinator communities

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Deepa Senapathi

Jochen Fründ

Matthias Albrecht

Michael PD Garratt

David Kleijn

...

2021/3/31

A conceptual guide to measuring species diversity

Oikos

Michael Roswell

Jonathan Dushoff

Rachael Winfree

2021/3

Species loss drives ecosystem function in experiments, but in nature the importance of species loss depends on dominance

Global Ecology and Biogeography

Mark A Genung

Jeremy Fox

Rachael Winfree

2020/9

Crop production in the USA is frequently limited by a lack of pollinators

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

JR Reilly

DR Artz

D Biddinger

K Bobiwash

NK Boyle

...

2020/7/29

How does biodiversity relate to ecosystem functioning in natural ecosystems

Unsolved problems in ecology

Rachael Winfree

2020/6/2

How much do rare and crop‐pollinating bees overlap in identity and flower preferences?

Journal of Applied Ecology

Molly MacLeod

James Reilly

Daniel P Cariveau

Mark A Genung

Michael Roswell

...

2020/2

See List of Professors in Rachael Winfree University(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey)

Co-Authors

H-index: 77
Taylor Ricketts

Taylor Ricketts

University of Vermont

H-index: 71
Jonathan Dushoff

Jonathan Dushoff

McMaster University

H-index: 70
Kleijn, D.

Kleijn, D.

Wageningen Universiteit

H-index: 60
Neal Williams

Neal Williams

University of California, Davis

H-index: 50
Elizabeth Crone

Elizabeth Crone

Tufts University

H-index: 45
John S. Ascher

John S. Ascher

National University of Singapore

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