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Osmia iridis

Taxonomy: Animalia > Arthropoda > Insecta > Hymenoptera > Megachilidae
Roles: study subject
ITIS TSN: 715566
External: RMBL Collections · iNaturalist · iDigBio · GenBank
Papers: 18 | Mentions: 29

Local Knowledge Graph (41 entities)

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Knowledge graph centered on Osmia iridis with 41 nodes and 183 connections. Top connected: Unknown, Bombus, Ligusticum porteri, Bombus terrestris, Bombus appositus.

Publications (18)

thesis

Phenological drivers and consequences for solitary bees

2024Role: text_match
student_paper

How season length and diet breadth limit mason bee success across an elevational gradient

2023Role: text_match
article

From the ground up: Building predictions for how climate change will affect belowground mutualisms, floral traits, and bee behavior

2021Climate Change EcologyRole: text_match
student_paper

Impacts of brood parasites, floral abundance, and bee age on maternal investment in a solitary bee, <i> Osmia iridis </i>

2021Role: text_match
article

Understanding pollen specialization in mason bees: a case study of six species

2021OecologiaRole: text_match
article

Temporal flexibility in the structure of plant–pollinator interaction networks

2020OikosRole: text_match
student_paper

Effects of weather and floral density on foraging activity of cavity nesting bees (<i> Osmia </i>spp.)

2019Role: text_match
thesis

How vulnerable are pollen-specialist solitary bees to temperature-mediated shifts in the timing of food availability?

2019Role: study subject
article

Pollen and vegetative secondary chemistry of three pollen-rewarding lupines

2019American Journal of BotanyRole: text_match
article

Two-year bee or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season length in a high-elevation solitary bee

2019American NaturalistRole: text_match
thesis

Examining the impact of pollen diet composition on bee development and lifespan

2018Role: study subject
student_paper

Nesting Preferences of Osmia Bees in the Rocky Mountains

2018Role: text_match
article

Nesting aggregation as a predictor of brood parasitism in mason bees (<i>Osmia spp.</i>)

2018Ecological EntemologyRole: text_match
article

Direct benefits and indirect costs of warm temperatures for high-elevation populations of a solitary bee

2017EcologyRole: text_match
student_paper

Use of Low Quality Pollen by Asteraceae-Specialist Osmia Mason Bees (<i>Hymenoptera: Megachilidae</i>)

2016Role: text_match
student_paper

Asteraceae pollen specialization affects vulnerability to brood parasitism in mason bees (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae).

2014Role: text_match
article

An examination of synchrony between insect emergence and flowering in Rocky Mountain meadows

2011Ecological MonographsRole: text_match
thesis

Plant–Pollinator interactions in a changing climate

2010Role: study subject