← Back to StoriesResearch Summary
1 IN 5 COLORADO BUMBLEBEES ARE AT RISK, NEW REPORT SAYS
ColoradoMesa Verde National ParkRocky Mountain Biological LaboratoryRocky FordBombusCucumis meloApis mellifera
Summary
The following information was released by the University of Colorado - Boulder: By Yvaine Ye On a cliffside at Mesa Verde National Park in southern Colorado, a fuzzy bee was industriously gnawing at the red sandstone. Making a loud grinding sound, the insect used its powerful jaws to drill tunnels a
Related Stories
Research Summary
University of Colorado-Boulder : 1 in 5 Colorado Bumblebees are Endangered, New Report Says
Research Summary
One In Five Colorado Bumblebees Are Endangered
Research Summary
1 IN 5 COLORADO BUMBLEBEES ARE ENDANGERED, NEW REPORT SAYS
Press Release
Irwin to Study Bee Abundance With Support From Kriz Endowment
Research Summary
Bumblebee Decline Linked With Extreme Heat Waves
Feature
Plants and their pollinators are increasingly out of sync
Research Summary
Cheating bees hurt flower reproduction
Research Summary
BEES "BETRAY' THEIR FLOWERS WHEN POLLINATOR SPECIES DECLINE, STUDY SHOWS
Related Publications
Publication
The effects of mine disturbance and contamination on pollination of subalpine wildflowers
Publication
Studies on the ecology of avian malaria in an alpine ecosystem
Publication
Pollinator mediated reproductive consequences of altered co-flowering under climate change depend on abiotic context
Publication
Plant–Pollinator interactions in a changing climate
Publication
