Showing results 5881 to 5900 on 6696 in total
Valentin Ollivier, Rémi Choquet, Amandine Gamble, Matthieu Bastien, Benoit Combes, Emmanuelle Gilot-Fromont, Maryline Pellerin, Jean‐michel Gaillard, Jean‐françois Lemaître, Hélène Verheyden, Thierry Boulinier
Marion Valeix
Christian Girard, T.H. Phuong, N. Savage, Sabrina Renaud
Z. Uhry, L. Remontet, P. Grosclaude, A. Belot, M. Colonna, M. Boussac-Zarebska, S. Delacour-Billon, J. Gentil, Nadine Bossard, M. Altana, F. Frete, Agnès Weill, A. Roger
G. Deceliere, Y. Letrillard, Sandrine Charles, C. Biémont
description
Texte test import
test import
Pierre Dupont, Dominique Allainé, Aurélie Cohas, Roger Pradel
L. Loe, R. Irvine, C. Bonenfant, A. Stien, R. Langvatn, S. Albon, A. Mysterud, N. Stenseth
S. Pavoine, S. Ollier, D. Pontier, D. Chessel
Mathieu Garel, Jean-Michel Gaillard, Thierry Chevrier, Jacques Michallet, Daniel Delorme, Guy Van Laere
Christophe Bonenfant, Jean-Michel Gaillard, Anne Loison, Manuela Royer, Daniel Chessel
Bumble bees are one of our most important wild pollinators, and populations are declining globally. Causes of decline appear to vary geographically. In Europe, for example, the proposed drivers are climate change, loss of floral resources and pesticides. In North America, however, a widely accepted hypothesis suggested that contact with an exotic European strain of fungal pathogen, Nosema bombi, was the sole cause of a precipitous decline. We have tested this exotic pathogen hypothesis using multiple genetic and genomic tools.
Julie Crabot, Sylvie Clappe, Stéphane Dray, T. Datry