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Bradley D Ohlinger

Showing results (1-10 of 10) with videos related to

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Trends in Cognitive Sciences|October 29, 2025
How miscommunication can improve collective performance in social insectsBradley D Ohlinger, Takao Sasaki
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|April 2, 2026
Animal cumulative culture through changing environmentsBradley D Ohlinger, Josep Call, Mathieu Charbonneau, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|May 19, 2025
Good Fences Make Good Neighbors: Adjacent Honey Bee Colonies Locally Partition Their Foraging Across LandscapesBradley D Ohlinger, Margaret J Couvillon, Laurence W Carstensen, et al.
Biology Open|May 7, 2025
Concrete consequences: construction on prime honey bee habitat doubles foraging distancesRobert B J Ostrom, Margaret J Couvillon, Bradley D Ohlinger, et al.
Current Biology : CB|February 25, 2025
Individuality impacts communication success in honey beesLaura C McHenry, Roger Schürch, Lindsay E Johnson, et al.
Biology Letters|August 31, 2022
Dance-communicated distances support nectar foraging as a supply-driven systemBradley D Ohlinger, Roger Schürch, Mary R Silliman, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|February 9, 2022
Honey Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) Decrease Foraging But Not Recruitment After Neonicotinoid ExposureBradley D Ohlinger, Roger Schürch, Sharif Durzi, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|December 6, 2023
A volatilized pyrethroid insecticide from a mosquito repelling device does not impact honey bee foraging and recruitmentMargaret J Couvillon, Bradley D Ohlinger, Connor Bizon, et al.
The Journal of Experimental Biology|May 6, 2025
Sublethal glyphosate exposure reduces honey bee foraging and alters the balance of biogenic amines in the brainLaura C McHenry, Roger Schürch, McAlister Council-Troche, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|October 23, 2024
Airborne metofluthrin, a pyrethroid repellent, does not impact foraging honey beesMargaret J Couvillon, John Hainze, Connor Bizon, et al.
Pageof 1

Showing results (1-10 of 10) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Trends in Cognitive Sciences|October 29, 2025
How miscommunication can improve collective performance in social insectsBradley D Ohlinger, Takao Sasaki
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|April 2, 2026
Animal cumulative culture through changing environmentsBradley D Ohlinger, Josep Call, Mathieu Charbonneau, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|May 19, 2025
Good Fences Make Good Neighbors: Adjacent Honey Bee Colonies Locally Partition Their Foraging Across LandscapesBradley D Ohlinger, Margaret J Couvillon, Laurence W Carstensen, et al.
Biology Open|May 7, 2025
Concrete consequences: construction on prime honey bee habitat doubles foraging distancesRobert B J Ostrom, Margaret J Couvillon, Bradley D Ohlinger, et al.
Current Biology : CB|February 25, 2025
Individuality impacts communication success in honey beesLaura C McHenry, Roger Schürch, Lindsay E Johnson, et al.
Biology Letters|August 31, 2022
Dance-communicated distances support nectar foraging as a supply-driven systemBradley D Ohlinger, Roger Schürch, Mary R Silliman, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|February 9, 2022
Honey Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae) Decrease Foraging But Not Recruitment After Neonicotinoid ExposureBradley D Ohlinger, Roger Schürch, Sharif Durzi, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|December 6, 2023
A volatilized pyrethroid insecticide from a mosquito repelling device does not impact honey bee foraging and recruitmentMargaret J Couvillon, Bradley D Ohlinger, Connor Bizon, et al.
The Journal of Experimental Biology|May 6, 2025
Sublethal glyphosate exposure reduces honey bee foraging and alters the balance of biogenic amines in the brainLaura C McHenry, Roger Schürch, McAlister Council-Troche, et al.
Journal of Insect Science (Online)|October 23, 2024
Airborne metofluthrin, a pyrethroid repellent, does not impact foraging honey beesMargaret J Couvillon, John Hainze, Connor Bizon, et al.
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