Rachael Winfree
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
H-index: 50
North America-United States
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 |