ESA Annual Meetings Online Program

Ten-Minute Papers, P-IE Section, Pollinators I

Sunday, November 13, 2011: 1:15 PM-4:35 PM
Room A19, First Floor (Reno-Sparks Convention Center)
Organizers:
B. Rogers Leonard
Bonnie Pendleton
Moderator:
Theresa L. Pitts-Singer
1:15 PM
Introductory Remarks
1:32 PM
Pollination in the context of land use change due to biomass crop production
Julianna Tuell, Michigan State University; Heidi Liere, University of Wisconsin; Rufus Isaacs, Michigan State University; Claudio Gratton, University of Wisconsin
1:44 PM
Pollinator diversity and foraging specialization
Berry J. Brosi, Emory University; Heather Mae Briggs, University of California
1:56 PM
Pollinators and natural enemies show different preferences for native plant species
Molly MacLeod, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; Rachael Winfree, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
2:08 PM
2:20 PM
Bees found in watermelon in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas
Chanda S. Henne, USDA - ARS; Eloy Rodriguez, USDA - ARS; John Adamczyk, USDA - ARS
2:44 PM
Break
2:59 PM
Honey bee (Apis mellifera) pollination affects onion seed set in California Central Valley
Sandra Gillespie, University of California, Davis; Rachael F. Long, University of California, Cooperative Extension; Neal Williams, University of California
3:11 PM
Pollination biology of the tree jujube (Ziziphus jujube) in Hanoi, Vietnam
Hanh Duc Pham, University of Guelph; Gard W. Otis, University of Guelph; Cynthia Scott-Dupree, University of Guelph
3:23 PM
Climate-associated phenological advances in bee pollinators and bee-pollinated plants
Ignasi Bartomeus, Estación Biológica de Doñana; Rachael Winfree, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; John S. Ascher, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central; Sheila R. Colla, York University; David L. Wagner, University of Connecticut; Bryan N. Danforth, Cornell University; Sarah Kornbluth, Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, Central
3:35 PM
Pollen limitation: how common should we expect It to be?
Jay A. Rosenheim, University of California, Davis; Neal Williams, University of California; Sebastian J. Schreiber, University of California, Davis
3:47 PM
Are New York apples pollen limited?
Eleanor J. Blitzer, Cornell University; Mia G. Park, Cornell University; Bryan N. Danforth, Cornell University
3:59 PM
Patterns of bee biodiversity across commercial New York apple orchards
Bryan N. Danforth, Cornell University; Mia Park, Cornell University; Eleanor J. Blitzer, Cornell University; Jason Gibbs, Cornell University; Michael Orr, Cornell University
4:11 PM
Replacing the honey bee: why wait? increasing sustainable agricultural practices and cost-cutting for small-scale farming
Nicholas G. Stewart, Georgia Gwinnett College; Mark A. Schlueter, Georgia Gwinnett College
4:23 PM
Manipulating soil temperatures to influence brood emergence in the alkali bee, Nomia melanderi Cockerell
Amber C. Vinchesi, Washington State University; Douglas Walsh, Washington State University; Douglas R. Cobos, Decagon Devices
4:35 PM
Concluding Remarks