GloBI interaction
pollinates
Subject transfers pollen to object's flowers, enabling fertilization.
35 claims with this interaction type. Vocabulary aligned with the Global Biotic Interactions Relations Ontology.
Top subjects
- Apis mellifera · western honey bee (9)
- Bombus spp. (7)
- Bombus terrestris · Buff Tailed Bumblebee (5)
- Hymenoptera (order) (2)
- Megachile rotundata · Alfalfa Leaf-cutter Bee (2)
- Diptera (1)
- Andrena spp. (1)
- Anthemurgus passiflorae (1)
- Syrphidae (family) (1)
- Insecta (class) (1)
- Nomia melanderi · Alkali Bee (1)
- Bombus lapidarius · Large Red Tailed Bumble Bee (1)
Top objects
- Solanum lycopersicum · Garden Tomato (5)
- Angiospermae (class) (4)
- Medicago sativa · Alfalfa (4)
- Plantae (kingdom) (3)
- Trifolium repens · Dutch Clover (2)
- Plantae (1)
- Angiosperms (1)
- Rubus spp. (1)
- Brassica spp. (1)
- Passiflora lutea · passionflower (1)
- Cucumis melo · Cantaloupe (1)
- Pyrus communis · Birnbaum (1)
Recent claims (top 200)
-
“Remove wild carrot weeds since they will pollinate with carrot”
Kalb T., Sukprakarn S., Juntakool S., Huang R. (2006) · p. 1 #6496123
-
“Cross-pollination is done by honeybees”
Kalb T., Sukprakarn S., Juntakool S., Huang R. (2006) · p. 1 #6496122
-
“bees in this group are important pollinators of apples”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1327 #6495813
-
“Bumble bees are important pollinators of tomatoes, eggplants, peppers and melons”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1327 #6495812
-
“Bumble bees are important pollinators of tomatoes, eggplants, peppers and melons”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1327 #6495811
-
“Bumble bees are important pollinators of tomatoes, eggplants, peppers and melons”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1327 #6495810
-
“Bumble bees are important pollinators of tomatoes, eggplants, peppers and melons”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1327 #6495809
-
“Insect pollination ... benefits ~75% of crop species worldwide and 88% of flowering plant species”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States · p. 1324 #6495807
-
“with honey bee visitation in only 14% of the systems”
Garibaldi L.A., Steffan-Dewenter I., Winfree R., Aizen M.A., Bommarco R., Cunningham S.A., Kremen C., Carvalheiro L.G., Harder L.D., et al. (2013) · p. 1609 #6495806
-
“fruit set increased significantly with wild insect visitation in all crop systems”
Garibaldi L.A., Steffan-Dewenter I., Winfree R., Aizen M.A., Bommarco R., Cunningham S.A., Kremen C., Carvalheiro L.G., Harder L.D., et al. (2013) · p. 1609 #6495805
-
“use honey bees and bumble bees for pollination”
van Lenteren J.C. (2012) · p. 11 #6495515
-
“use honey bees and bumble bees for pollination”
van Lenteren J.C. (2012) · p. 11 #6495479
-
“use honey bees and bumble bees for pollination”
van Lenteren J.C. (2012) · p. 11 #6495473
-
“bumble bee ranges contracting at warm range margins under warming”
Halsch C.A., Shapiro A.M., Fordyce J.A., Nice C.C., Thorne J.H., Waetjen D.P., Forister M.L. (2021) · Insects and recent climate change #6495207
-
“bumblebees buzz pollinate tomato flowers”
Garibaldi L.A., et al. (2024) · Impact of pesticide use on wild bee distributions across the United States #6495203
-
“diverse pollinator communities including hoverflies benefit crop production”
Dainese M., Martin E.A., Aizen M.A., Albrecht M., Bartomeus I., Bommarco R., Carvalheiro L.G., Chaplin-Kramer R., Gagic V., Garibaldi L.A., Ghazoul J., Grab H., Jonsson M., Karp D.S., Kennedy C.M., Kleijn D., Kremen C., Landis D.A., Letourneau D.K., Marini L., Poveda K., Rader R., Smith H.G., Tscharntke T., Winfree R., Zhang W., Zou Y., et al. (2019) · A global synthesis reveals biodiversity-mediated benefits for crop production · p. 3 #6495183
-
“wild pollinator diversity benefits crop yield independently of managed bees”
Dainese M., Martin E.A., Aizen M.A., Albrecht M., Bartomeus I., Bommarco R., Carvalheiro L.G., Chaplin-Kramer R., Gagic V., Garibaldi L.A., Ghazoul J., Grab H., Jonsson M., Karp D.S., Kennedy C.M., Kleijn D., Kremen C., Landis D.A., Letourneau D.K., Marini L., Poveda K., Rader R., Smith H.G., Tscharntke T., Winfree R., Zhang W., Zou Y., et al. (2019) · A global synthesis reveals biodiversity-mediated benefits for crop production · p. 3 #6495181
-
“managed honey bees do not substitute for wild pollinator diversity effects”
Dainese M., Martin E.A., Aizen M.A., Albrecht M., Bartomeus I., Bommarco R., Carvalheiro L.G., Chaplin-Kramer R., Gagic V., Garibaldi L.A., Ghazoul J., Grab H., Jonsson M., Karp D.S., Kennedy C.M., Kleijn D., Kremen C., Landis D.A., Letourneau D.K., Marini L., Poveda K., Rader R., Smith H.G., Tscharntke T., Winfree R., Zhang W., Zou Y., et al. (2019) · A global synthesis reveals biodiversity-mediated benefits for crop production · p. 3 #6495180
-
“pollinator diversity increased crop production across 1475 sites”
Dainese M., Martin E.A., Aizen M.A., Albrecht M., Bartomeus I., Bommarco R., Carvalheiro L.G., Chaplin-Kramer R., Gagic V., Garibaldi L.A., Ghazoul J., Grab H., Jonsson M., Karp D.S., Kennedy C.M., Kleijn D., Kremen C., Landis D.A., Letourneau D.K., Marini L., Poveda K., Rader R., Smith H.G., Tscharntke T., Winfree R., Zhang W., Zou Y., et al. (2019) · A global synthesis reveals biodiversity-mediated benefits for crop production · p. 1 #6495177
-
“Flies are one of the most ancient pollinators of flowering plants”
Das B.C., et al. (2021) · Parasitoids in Pest Management · p. 320 #6495149
-
“berries, pears, apples, citrus, melons, peas, beans, and tomatoes would not exist without insects”
Pedigo L.P. (2002) · Entomology and Pest Management, Fourth Edition · p. 21 #6492526
-
“leafcutter bees, Megachile rotundata, are managed to improve alfalfa pollination and seed production”
Pedigo L.P. (2002) · Entomology and Pest Management, Fourth Edition · p. 21 #6492525
-
“alkali bees, Nomia melanderi, and leafcutter bees managed to improve alfalfa pollination”
Pedigo L.P. (2002) · Entomology and Pest Management, Fourth Edition · p. 21 #6492524
-
“Anthemurgus passiflorae (Robertson), a specialist on flowers of Passiflora lutea in the eastern United States”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 20 #6492482
-
“traplining B. impatiens become faster and more accurate in following their trapline”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 103 #6492479
-
“foraging in artificially created patches of varying size of white clover”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 108 #6492478
-
“not effective pollinators of Ericaceae...or Solanaceae such as...tomatoes”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492476
-
“other Bombus species that do the same job elsewhere”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492475
-
“Bombus terrestris pollinates tomatoes in European greenhouses”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492474
-
“Megachile rotundata pollinates alfalfa in many areas”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492473
-
“Megachile rotundata pollinates alfalfa in many areas”
Michener C.D. (2007) · The Bees of the World, Second Edition · p. 4 #6492472
-
“only accessed by heavy insects such as bumblebees that depress the keel”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 82 #6492456
-
“grey pollen was primarily bramble Rubus spp.”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 98 #6492455
-
“black pollen was primarily poppy Papaver rhoeas L.”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 98 #6492454
-
“Sixty-three per cent of pollen foragers at colonies next to the borage field collected borage pollen”
Goulson D. (2010) · Bumblebees: Behaviour, Ecology, and Conservation (Second Edition) · p. 93 #6492453