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生物多样性教授Jeff Ollerton博士学术报告(2016年3月7日上午)

已有 4743 次阅读 2016-3-1 06:58 |系统分类:科研笔记| 学术交流, 生物多样性, 学术报告, 种间互作, 传粉者

英国Northampton大学生物多样性教授Jeff Ollerton博士将到访动物研究所开展合作交流,并做学术报告。

报告题目:Pollinator function, diversity and declines: the view from central England

报告时间:201637日上午10:00-11:30

报告地点:中国科学院动物研究所C101会议室

       Jeff Ollerton教授作为主要或唯一作者在ScienceEcologyProceedings BEcology Letters等期刊上发表了60余篇研究论文。其中Waser etal.1996)是传粉生态学领域被引用最高的论文之一。他和他的团队关于植物-传粉者相互作用生态学和多样性的研究成果在国际学术界得到公认:1)为传粉者种群保护提供了科学依据,并影响了英国及世界保护政策;2)提高了英国及世界对传粉者保护的公众意识;3)引领了英国园林业的改变。

附:Jeff Ollerton教授简历

ProfessorJEFF OLLERTON BSc (Hons), PhD 

CONTACT DETAILS AND LINKS                    

Email: jeff.ollerton@northampton.ac.uk

Personal blog: http://jeffollerton.wordpress.com/ 

ResearchGate profile:  https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jeff_Ollerton/

Google Scholar profile:  http://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=6zHjOd8AAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao

ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0887-8235

The Landscape and Biodiversity Research Group atthe University of Northampton: http://oldweb.northampton.ac.uk/aps/env/lbrg/index.html

EMPLOYMENT AND EDUCATION

September2014 to present

Head of Research and Enterprise in the School of Science and Technology.

September2012

Promoted to Professor of Biodiversity, School of Science and Technology, The Universityof Northampton.  

Current roles include: chair of theSchool of Science and Technology Research and Enterprise Committee; membershipof the Science Research Degrees Board; contributing to research student andearly career researcher training across the university; teaching and moduleleadership within the Department of Environmental and Geographical Sciences; leadershipof the Landscape and Biodiversity Research Group.  I also led the Research Excellence Framework(REF) submission to UoA17 (Geography and Environmental Studies) and in thatrole sat on the University’s REF Working Group.    

September2010

Promoted to Reader in Biodiversity, School of Science and Technology, The University ofNorthampton.  In addition I was theSchool’s Research Coordinator (0.5 appointment, effective October 2009).

1995- 2010  

Lecturer, then Senior Lecturer, in the Division of Environmental Science, School ofApplied Sciences (now School of Science and Technology), The University ofNorthampton (formerly Nene College, then University College Northampton).  Lecturing on BSc courses in ConservationBiology, Biology and Environmental Science, and MSc Environmental Management.

Previous duties have included:Admissions Tutor for Ecology (1995-1999); Course Leader for MSc EnvironmentalManagement (1997-1999); founder and course leader for BSc (Hons) Biology (1999to 2010); Postgraduate Degrees Tutor for the Division of Environmental Science(2001-2004); member of the Research Degrees Committee of the University(2004-2007); Postgraduate Research Training Framework Coordinator for theUniversity (2001-2007).  The role ofPostgraduate Research Training Framework Coordinator is particularly noteworthyas this was in the period just prior to the then University CollegeNorthampton’s application for Research Degree Awarding Powers and fulluniversity status.  The generic trainingprogramme that I developed and implemented was widely acknowledged within theuniversity, and in the QAA’s subsequent report, as playing a significant rolein the institution successfully attaining full university status.  Although I stepped down from this role in 2007to focus on other activities, I continue to be involved in the twice-yearlyresearch student induction weeks, and the evening and weekend trainingworkshops.  The time that I spent in therole of Postgraduate Research Training Framework Coordinator is one of the mostfulfilling periods of my career to date and I was pleased to play a part,however minor, in a significant developmental stage of the University ofNorthampton.      

1994- 1995                          

Parttime lecturer, Oxford Brookes University.

1993- 1994

Visiting postdoctoral researcher based at Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia,studying the pollination ecology of Australian Piperaceae.  Hosted by Professor Andrew Beattie and fundedby grants from the British Ecological Society, the Percy Sladen Memorial Fund(Linnean Society of London) and the British Council.

1989- 1993              

PhD:"Ecology of flowering and fruiting in Lotuscorniculatus L.", Oxford Brookes University (Supervisors: Dr. AndrewLack and Dr Denis Owen).    

This research was anassessment of the interaction of flowering phenology, pollinator activity,plant size, seed predation and reproductive output using the Wytham Woodspopulations of Lotus corniculatus(Fabaceae) as a case study.  Whilstcarrying out the research I was at the same time employed as a PostgraduateTeaching Assistant, running tutorials and assisting with laboratory and fieldwork for undergraduate courses.  

1987- 1989              

BSc(Hons) Environmental Biology (2:i) Oxford Brookes University.

RESEARCHAND SCHOLARLY INTERESTS

The ecology, evolution and conservation the Earth’s biodiversity defines the broad scope ofmy professional interests.  Within thisvast field I mainly work on the biogeography and biodiversity of mutualisticspecies interactions, such as plant-pollinator relationships, in which allparticipants benefit from the relationship. Mutualisms are hugely important ecological relationships that play keyroles in determining community structure and ecosystem function, as well asbeing the basis for ecosystem services of human value, for example croppollination.  As well as plant-pollinatorrelationships, I also work on non-terrestrial mutualisms such as those betweenanemonefish and sea anemones.

In addition I havea wider interest in how biodiversity contributes to human society throughecosystem goods and services, how that biodiversity may be conserved in anever-changing world, and how we have arrived at our current understanding ofthe biogeography and biodiversity of the natural world.  This links to the research and writing I doin the area of the history of human understanding and exploitation ofbiodiversity, specifically botanical science and horticulturalexploration.  The main current project isa biography of John Tweedie, a notable 19th Century plant collector who was asignificant early collector working in the Atlantic Rainforest of Brazil and inthe pampas grasslands.  In addition heintroduced a number of plants from South America that continue to be grown inBritish gardens.

Current internationalresearch collaborations include projects related to the biogeography ofplant-pollinator interactions (e.g. Prof. Nick Waser, Prof. Mary Price, Dr Ruben Alarcón in the USA); the ecology of flowering time with Mexicancolleagues (Prof. Victor Parra-Tabla and Dr Miguel Munguía-Rosas) and theeffect of historical climates on pollination systems (Dr Bo Dalsgaard, University of Copenhagen, Denmark).  

This research has been covered by a range of local, national and international media, and I am regularly interviewed about my work.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

Only those from the last ten years that Ipersonally presented are listed:

2015 - Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology, Denmark (paper)

- Ecological Networks Conference,University of Bristol (paper)

2014 - Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology, Sweden (paper)

2014 - BES Macroecology Special Interest Group,University of Nottingham (paper)

2013 - 64th NationalBotanical Congress, Belo Horizonte, Brazil (invitedpaper)

2012 - Hedgerow Futures,University of Staffordshire (invitedpaper)

2011- Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology, Denmark (paper)

2010 - Linnean Society - Palynology SpecialistGroup, London (invited paper)

        - ScandinavianAssociation for Pollination Ecology, Sweden (paper)

2009 - Origin of Biodiversity byBiological Interactions, Tokyo (invited paper)

2008 - The Ecology and Evolutionof Plant-Pollinator Interactions, Milwaukee (invited paper)

- Biodiversity Research - Safeguarding the Future,Bonn (invited paper – see conference report at:  http://www.iubs.org/pdf/publi/PreCOP9%20Report.pdf)

2007 - Royal Entomological SocietyMeeting, Edinburgh (invited paperand symposium co-organizer)

2005 - Scandinavian Association for Pollination Ecology, Sweden (invitedspecial paper)

        - 17thInternationalBotanical Congress, Vienna (invited paper)

2004 - Southern Connections Conference, Cape Town (invited paper)

         - RoyalEntomological Society Meeting, London (invitedpaper)

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITY          

  • Member of The British Ecological Society since     1990  

  • Active participant of the Bumblebee Working Group

  • Grant reviewer for the Natural Environment     Research Council, Biotechnology and Biosciences Research Council, Science     Foundation Ireland, the Norwegian Research Council, Linnean Society of     London, the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation, the Czech Science     Foundation, National Geographic, the Fund for Scientific Research (Belgium),     the National Science Foundation of South Africa, the Swiss National     Science Foundation, and the U.S. Army Research Office  

  • Academic     referee for manuscripts in over 30 journals including:  Science,Nature Communications, PNAS-USA, Trends in     Ecology and Evolution,Proceedings of the     Royal Society series B.,     Ecology, Ecology Letters, Evolution,     Biology Letters, American Naturalist, PLoS Biology, PLoS ONE, Heredity, Oikos, Journal of Tropical Ecology, Oecologia and Journal of     Ecology  

  • Academic     referee for books published by Blackwell Science, Cambridge University     Press and Oxford University Press  

  • Founding member of the Editorial Board for the Journal of Pollination Ecology

  • Academic Editor for PLoS ONE

  • Internal examiner for 4 PhDs at The University of     Northampton

  • External examiner for 23 PhD candidates, as     follows:

(1)  Cambridge University – February 2002 (Lynn Dicks)

(2)  Open University – February 2002 (Mark Gardener)

(3)  University of Bristol – February 2003 (Mikael Forup)

(4)  University of Southampton – September 2004 (James Peat)

(5)  University of Stockholm – May 2004 (Kjell Bolmgren)

(6)  University of Sydney – June 2006 (Yvonne Davila)

(7)  University of Zurich – August 2006 (Christopher Kaiser)

(8)  University of Leeds – January 2007 (Shazia Raja)

(9)  University of Edinburgh – May 2007 (Kath Baldock)

(10) Swedish Agricultural University,Uppsala – May 2007 (Erik Sjödin)

(11) Norwegian University of LifeSciences – May 2007 (Anders Nielsen)

(12) University of Lausanne – March 2008(Antonina Internicola)

(13) Trinity College Dublin – May 2009(Caroline Nienhuis)

(14) Queen Mary, University of London –May 2010 (Sarah Arnold)

(15) Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona,Spain – November 2010 (Ana María Martín González)

(16) University of KwaZulu-Natal, SouthAfrica – February 2011 (Adam Shuttleworth)

(17) Rhodes University, South Africa –February 2011 (Gareth Coombs)

(18) University of Bristol – February2013 (Rachel Gibson)

(19) Trinity College Dublin – May 2013(Sarah Mullen)

(20) University of Sydney – September2013 (Tony Popic)

(21) University of Birmingham – November2014 (Robert Fowler)

(22) University of Lausanne – June 2015(Tomasz Suchan)

(23)University of Reading – September2015 (Jennifer Wickens)

  • Invited research lectures have been presented at     the Universities of Cambridge, York, Lancaster, Portsmouth, KwaZulu-Natal,     California (Riverside), Southampton, Bayreuth, Mainz, Copenhagen and     Zurich, as well as Royal Holloway, Rothamsted Research, Oxford Brookes     University, Trinity College, Dublin, the Institute of Zoology (London),     the University of Tübingen (the Hilgendorf Lecture) and the University of     Lausanne.  In November 2013 I spoke     at five different Brazilian universities as part of a month-long research     and teaching visit

  • External panel member for a number of course     reviews and validations, most recently at the Open University and the     University of Brighton

  • Reviewer and Panel Member (2010) for the     L’Oreal-UNESCO Women in Science Fellowships 2010 - 2015

  • External examiner for MRes theses at University     of Brighton – 2010 - 2103

  • Tutor for Tropical Biology Association Tanzania     field course (July-August 2011).

  • External examiner for undergraduate and     postgraduate environmental science courses at University College, Dublin     (2011 -  2015)

  • Member of the British Ecological Society Grant     Review College (2012 - present)

  • Member of the Northamptonshire Local Nature     Partnership committee, representing The University of Northampton (2012 to     present)

  • Visiting Professor at the University of Campinas,     Brazil (2013)

SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY ACTIVITIES

  • Script advisor for the BBC Scotland series How to Grow a Planet, broadcast     2012

  • Science advisor for a feature length documentary Hidden Beauty: A Love Story That Feeds     the Earth (Cinesite and the Walt Disney Studios).  First international premier was in     Spring 2011 in France (renamed Pollen)

  • Science advisor and on-screen participant in the     BBC three part series Bees,     Butterflies and Blooms with Sarah Raven.  Filming and advising during 2010 and     2011, broadcast 2012

  • Science advisor and on-screen participant in the     BBC Gardeners’ World - Science in the Garden special     edition with Carol Klein. Filmed August 2009, broadcast November 2010

  • Member of the Wildlife Gardening Forum: Research     Working Group (Royal Horticultural Society).  Invited to join 2010, ongoing

  • Advisor to the Parliamentary Office of Science     and Technology for their POSTnote briefing on Insect Pollination (POSTnote number 348, January 2010)

  • Invited participant in the International Insect     Pollinators Workshop at Westminster, hosted by the Foreign and     Commonwealth Office, the Science and Innovation Network and the Department     for Business Innovation and Skills      (February 2012)

  • Invited participant in the Pollinator Monitoring     Workshop, Natural History Museum, London (October 2013)

  • Science advisor and on-screen participant in the     BBC series Plant Odyssey with Carol     Klein.  Filming and advising summer     2014 for broadcast 2015

  • Expert reviewer for the Intergovernmental     Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) Pollination     Assessment Report (2015)

  • Invited participant in a two-day RC-funded     workshop at Imperial College to develop novel research actions to support     the National Pollinator Strategy (2015) 

RESEARCH IMPACT

The decline of bees, hoverflies, and other pollinators has been widely described as a“pollination crisis” (e.g. Progress Report of FAO on the Implementation of theInternational Pollinators Initiative – September 2012) which could haveprofound effects on both food security, and wild plant populations and theecosystem services they support.  Researchby myself and colleagues into the ecology and diversity of plant-pollinatorinteractions has: (a) provided a scientific evidence base that has influencednational and international policies relating to the conservation of pollinatorpopulations; (b) raised national and international public awareness of thesubject of pollinator conservation; and (c) led to positive changes in UKgardening practices.  This wasacknowledged by a successful REF Impact Case Study entitled “Pollinatorconservation: impact on government policy and public practices – 1996 to 2013”(copy available on request) 

PUBLICATIONS

Since1992 I have published or in press, 60 peer reviewed research papers, bookchapters and edited books, the majority as first or sole author.  High Impact Factor journals publishing mypeer-reviewed work include Science, Ecology, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, and Ecology Letters.  One ofthese papers (Waser et al. 1996) isnow the third most highly cited paper in the field of pollination ecology with904 citations.  The average citation ratefor my peer-reviewed research outputs is 49.5 citations per paper and myh-index currently stands at 23 (source for all statistics: ISI Web of Science,all databases, October 2015).  Citationrates and h-index using the less conservative Google Scholar are, of course,significantly higher.  

As well as these peer reviewed research outputs I have contributed non-peerreviewed commentaries, book reviews, popular articles and editorials tomagazines and journals, including Natureand Science.

I have co-editedand contributed chapters to two collections of papers: a festschrift in honour of the late Professor Knut Faegri (Totland et al. 2000); and a major volume for theUniversity of Chicago Press (Waser & Ollerton 2006).  The latter received a series of enthusiasticreviews in international journals, with statements such as: “an important contribution to ourunderstanding of plant–pollinator interactions” and “a masterful overview of a rich field in a stage of dynamic ferment”.  

PUBLICATIONS

           Since1992 I have published or in press, 60 peer reviewed research papers, bookchapters and edited books, the majority as first or sole author.  High Impact Factor journals publishing my peer-reviewedwork include Science, Ecology, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, and Ecology Letters.  One ofthese papers (Waser et al. 1996) isnow the third most highly cited paper in the field of pollination ecology with 904citations.  The average citation rate formy peer-reviewed research outputs is 49.5 citations per paper and my h-indexcurrently stands at 23 (source for all statistics: ISI Web of Science, alldatabases, October 2015).  Citation ratesand h-index using the less conservative Google Scholar are, of course,significantly higher.  

          As well as these peer reviewed research outputs I have contributed non-peerreviewed commentaries, book reviews, popular articles and editorials tomagazines and journals, including Natureand Science.

I haveco-edited and contributed chapters to two collections of papers: a festschrift in honour of the lateProfessor Knut Faegri (Totland et al.2000); and a major volume for the University of Chicago Press (Waser &Ollerton 2006).  The latter received aseries of enthusiastic reviews in international journals, with statements suchas: “an important contribution to ourunderstanding of plant–pollinator interactions” and “a masterful overview of a rich field in a stage of dynamic ferment”.  

All of my publicationsare listed below; peer-reviewed journal papers, edited volumes and chapters aremarked*

[89] *Sonne, J., Kyvsgaard, P., Maruyama, P.K.,Vizentin-Bugoni, J., Ollerton, J., Sazima, M., Rahbek, C. & Dalsgaard, B.(in press) Spatial effects of artificial feeders on hummingbird abundance,floral visitation and pollen deposition. Journalof Ornithology

[88] *Bailes, E., Ollerton, J., Pattrick, J. &Glover, B.J. (2015) How can an understanding of plant-pollinator interactionscontribute to global food security? CurrentOpinion in Plant Biology 26: 72-79  

[87] *Moles, A. & Ollerton, J. (in press) Is thenotion that species interactions are stronger and more specialized in thetropics a zombie idea?  Biotropica  

[86] *Rahman, L. Md., Tarrant, S., McCollin, D. & Ollerton,J. (2015) Vegetation cover and grasslands in the vicinity acceleratedevelopment of carabid beetle assemblages on restored landfill sites.  Zoologyand Ecology (in press)

[85] *Sirohi, M.H., Jackson, J., Edwards, M. &Ollerton, J. (2015) Diversity and abundance of solitary bees in an urbancentre: a case study from Northampton (England).  Journalof Insect Conservation 19: 487-500

[84] Ollerton, J. (2015) Book review of: “A Veritable Eden” by A. Brooks. Manchester Region History Review inpress

[83] *Ollerton, J. Waser, N.M., Rodrigo Rech, A. &Price, M.V. (2015) Using the literature to test pollination syndromes — some methodologicalcautions.  Journal of Pollination Ecology 16: 119-125

[82] *Ollerton, J., Erenler, H., Edwards, M. &Crockett, R. (2014) Extinctions of aculeate pollinators in Britain and the roleof large-scale agricultural changes.  Science 346: 1360-1362

[81] Ollerton, J. (2013) The Biodiversity Index – atool for facilities management.  Essential FM Report 109: 2-3

[80] *Dalsgaard, B., Trøjelsgaard, K, Martín González,A.M., Nogués-Bravo, D., Ollerton, J., Petanidou, T.,  Sandel, B., Schleuning, M., Wang, Z., Rahbek,C., Sutherland, W.J., Svenning, J.C. & Olesen, J.M. (2013)  Historical climate-change influencesmodularity of pollination networks.  Ecography 36: 1331–1340

[79] *Tarrant, S., Ollerton, J., Rahman, L. Md.,Griffin, J. & McCollin, D. (2013) Grassland restoration on landfill sitesin the East Midlands, UK: an evaluation of floral resources and pollinatinginsects.  Restoration Ecology 21: 560–568

[78] *Ollerton, J. & Nuttman, C. (2013) Aggressivedisplacement of Xylocopa nigritacarpenter bees from flowers of Lagenariasphaerica (Cucurbitaceae) by territorial male Eastern Olive Sunbirds (Cyanomitra olivacea) in Tanzania.  Journalof Pollination Ecology 11: 21-26

[77] *Parker, W. & Ollerton, J. (2013) Immunologyenlightened by evolutionary biology and anthropology: an approach necessary forpublic health.  Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health 2013(1): 89-103 doi:10.1093/emph/eot00 

[76] *Rahman, L. Md., Tarrant, S., McCollin, D.Ollerton, J. (2013) Plant community composition and attributes revealconservation implications for newly created grassland on capped landfill sites.Journal for Nature Conservation 21:198-205

[75] Vanbergen, A.J., Ambrose, N., Aston, D., Biesmeijer,J.C., Bourke, A., Breeze, T., Brotherton, P., Brown, M., Chandler, D., Clook,M., Connolly, C.N., Costigan, P.,  Coulson,M., Cresswell, J., Dean, R., Dicks, L., Felicioli, A., Fojt, O., Gallai, N., Genersch,E., Godfray, C., Grieg-Gran, M., Halstead, A., Harding, D., Harris, B., Hartfield,C., Heard, M.S., Herren, B., Howarth, J., Ings, T., Kleijn, D., Klein, A., Kunin,W.E., Lewis, G., MacEwen, A., Maus, C., McIntosh, L., Millar, N.S., Neumann,P., Ollerton, J.,  Olschewski, R., Osborne,J.L., Paxton, R.J., Pettis, J.,  Phillipson, B., Potts, S.G., Pywell, R., Rasmont,P.,  Roberts, S., Salles, J.-M.,  Schweiger, O., Sima, P., Thompson, H., Titera,D., Vaissiere, B., Van der Sluijs, J., Webster, S., Wentworth, J. & Wright,G.A. (2012) Insect pollinators: linking research and policy.  Workshopreport, U.K. Science and Innovation Network.

[74] Ollerton, J. (2012) The names of pubs and inns:not just for the birds. Bulletin of theBritish Ecological Society 43: 46-47

[73] Ollerton, J. (2012) Biogeography: are tropical speciesless specialised? Current Biology 22:R914-R915

[72] Ollerton, J. (2012) The importance of nativepollinators. The Plantsman 11:86-89 

[71] *Ollerton, J., Watts, S., Connerty, S., Lock, J.,Parker, L., Wilson, I., Schueller, S., Nattero, J., Cocucci, A.A., Izhaki, I., Geerts,S. & Pauw, A. (2012) Pollination ecology of the invasive tree tobacco Nicotiana glauca: comparisons acrossnative and non-native ranges. Journal ofPollination Ecology 9: 85-95  

[70] *Dalsgaard, B., Timmermann, A., Martín González,A.M., Olesen, J.M, Ollerton, J. & Andersen, L.H. (2012) Heliconia-hummingbird interactions inthe Lesser Antilles: a geographic mosaic? CaribbeanJournal of Science 46: 328-331

[69] *Ollerton, J., Chancellor, G. & van Wyhe, J.(2012) John Tweedie and Charles Darwin in Buenos Aires.  Notesand Records of the Royal Society 66: 115-124

[68] Ollerton, J. (2012) The importance of LWS meadowsfor pollinating insects.  WildPlaces – the Local Wildlife SitesNewsletter 3: 10

[67] *Watts, S., Huamán Ovalle, D., Moreno Herrera, M.& Ollerton, J. (2012) Pollinator effectiveness of native and non-native flowervisitors to an apparently generalist Andean shrub, Duranta mandonii (Verbenaceae). PlantSpecies Biology 27: 147–158

[66] *Cranmer, L., McCollin, D. & Ollerton, J.(2012) Landscape structure influences pollinator movements and directly affectsplant reproductive success. Oikos 121:562-568

[65] *Rahman, L. Md., Tarrant, S., McCollin, D. & Ollerton,J. (2012) Influence of habitat quality, landscape structure and food resourceson breeding skylark (Alauda arvensis)territory distribution on restored landfill sites.  Landscapeand Urban Planning 105: 281–287

[64] Ollerton, J., Price, V., Armbruster, W.S., Memmott,J., Watts, S., Waser, N.M., Totland, Ø., Goulson, D., Alarcón, R., Stout, J.S.& Tarrant, S. (2012) Overplaying the role of honey bees as pollinators: Acomment on Aebi and Neumann (2011). Trendsin Ecology and Evolution 27: 141-142

[63] *Munguía-Rosas, M.A., Parra-Tabla, V., Ollerton,J. & Carlos Cervera, J. (2012) Environmental control of reproductivephenology and the effect of pollen supplementation on resource allocation inthe cleistogamous weed, Ruellia nudiflora(Acanthaceae). Annals of Botany 109:343-350

[62] *Dalsgaard, B., Magård, E., Fjeldså, J., MartínGonzález, A.M., Rahbek, C., Olesen, J.M., Ollerton, J., Alarcón, R., Araujo, A.C.,Cotton, P., Lara, C., Machado, C.C., Sazima, I., Sazima, M., Timmermann, A.,Watts, S., Sandel, B., Sutherland, W.J., Svenning, J.C. (2011) Specialization in plant-hummingbird networks is associatedwith species richness, contemporary precipitation and Quaternary climate-changevelocity. PLoS ONE 6(10): e25891.doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0025891

[61] *Rahman, L. Md., Tarrant, S., McCollin, D. and Ollerton,J. (2011) The conservation value of restored landfill sites in the EastMidlands, UK for supporting bird communities. Biodiversity and Conservation20: 1879-1893

[60] *Munguía-Rosas, M.A. Ollerton, J. Parra-Tabla, V.& Arturo De-Nova, J. (2011) Meta-analysis of phenotypic selection onflowering phenology suggests that early flowering plants are favoured. Ecology Letters 14: 511-521

[59] *Munguía-Rosas, M.A. Ollerton, J. & Parra-Tabla,V. (2011) Phenotypic selection on flowering phenology and size of two dioeciousplant species with different pollen vectors. Plant Species Biology 26: 205–212

[58] *Parra-Tabla, V., Vargas C.F., Naval, C., Calvo,L.M. & Ollerton, J. (2011) Population status andreproductive success of an endangered epiphytic orchid in a fragmentedlandscape. Biotropica 43: 640-647

[57] *Mayer, C., Adler, L., Armbruster, W.S. Dafni, A.,Eardley, C., Huang, S.-Q., Kevan, P.G., Ollerton, J., Packer, L. Ssymank, A.,Stout, J.C. & Potts, S.G. (2011) Pollination ecology in the 21st century:key questions for future research.  Journal of Pollination Ecology 3: 8-23

[56] *Waser, N.M., Ollerton, J. & Erhardt, A.(2011) Typology in pollination biology: lessons from an historical critique. Journalof Pollination Ecology 3: 1-7

[55] *Ollerton, J., Tarrant, S. & Winfree, R. (2011)How many flowering plants are pollinated by animals?  Oikos  120: 321–326

[54] Ollerton, J. and Waser, N.M. (2010) Pollinatorsas critical ecosystem service providers: the biodiversity of speciesinteractions [abstract].  Proceedings ofthe CBD – COP 9 Associated Scientific Conference on Biodiversity Research(including the COP 9 President’s Conclusions and the Recommendations to COP 9),

Bonn, May 12 – 16, 2008.  BiologyInternational 48: s.n.

[53] Ollerton, J. (2010) W(h)ither science? Dark Mountain 1: 146-149

[52] *Erenler, H.E., Ashton, P., Gillman, M. & Ollerton,J. (2010) Factors determining species richness of soil seed banks in lowlandancient woodlands. Biodiversity andConservation 19: 1631-1648

[51] *Ricciardi, F., Boyer, M. & Ollerton, J.(2010) Assemblage and interaction structure of the anemonefish-anemonemutualism across the Manado region of Sulawesi, Indonesia. Environmental Biology of Fishes 87: 333-347

[50] Ollerton, J. & Coulthard, E. (2009) Evolutionof animal pollination. Science 326:808-809

[49] *Martin Gonzalez, A.M., Dalsgaard, B., Ollerton,J., Timmermann, A., Olesen, J.M., Andersen, L. & Tossas, A.G. (2009)Effects of climate on pollination networks in the West Indies. Journal of Tropical Ecology 25: 493-506

[48] *Ollerton, J., Masinde, S., Meve, U., Picker, M.& Whittington, A. (2009) Fly pollination in Ceropegia (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae): Biogeographic andphylogenetic perspectives. Annals ofBotany 103: 1501-1514

[47] *Ollerton, J., Alarcón, R., Waser, N.M., Price,M.V., Watts, S., Cranmer, L., Hingston, A. Peter, C.I. & Rotenberry, J.(2009) A global test of the pollination syndrome hypothesis. Annals of Botany 103: 1471-1480

[46] *Dalsgaard, B., Martín González, A.M., Olesen,J.M., Ollerton, J., Timmermann, A., Andersen, L.H., & Tossas, A.G. (2009)Plant–hummingbird interactions in the West Indies: floral specialisationgradients associated with environment and hummingbird size. Oecologia 159: 757-766

[45] *Ollerton, J., Cranmer, L., Stelzer, R.,Sullivan, S. & Chittka, L. (2009) Bird pollination of Canary Island endemicplants. Naturwissenschaften 96:221-232

[44] *Alarcón, R., Waser, N.M. & Ollerton, J.(2008) Year-to-year variation in the topology of a plant-pollinator interactionnetwork. Oikos 117: 1796-1807

[43] *Dalsgaard, B., Martín González, A.M., Olesen,J.M. Timmermann, A., Andersen, L.H. & Ollerton, J. (2008) Pollinationnetworks and functional specialization: a test using Lesser Antilleanplant-hummingbird assemblages. Oikos 117:789-793

[42] Ollerton, J. (2008) Blogging from Bonn – apersonal account of the pre-COP9 meeting: “Biodiversity Research – Safeguardingthe Future”.  Bulletin of the British Ecological Society 39: 35-38

[41] Ollerton, J. (2008) Book review of: “Ecology and Evolution of Flowers” byL.D. Harder & S.C.H. Barrett.  Systematic Biology 57: 516-517

[40] *Ollerton, J., Killick, A., Lamborn, E., Watts,S. & Whiston, M. (2007) Multiple meanings and modes: on the many ways to bea generalist flower. Taxon 56: 717-728

[39] *Ollerton, J., Grace, J. & Smith, K. (2007)Pollinator behaviour and adaptive floral colour change in Anthophora alluadii (Hymenoptera: Apidae) and Erysimum scoparium (Brassicaceae) on Tenerife. Entomologia Generalis 29: 253-268

[38] *Ollerton, J., McCollin, D., Fautin, D.G &Allen, G.R. (2007) Finding NEMO – nestedness engendered by mutualistic organisationin anemonefish and their hosts. Proceedingsof the Royal Society series B 274: 591-598 

[37] *Ollerton, J., Stott, A., Allnutt, E., Shove, S.,Taylor, C. & Lamborn, E. (2007) Pollination niche overlap between aparasitic plant and its host.  Oecologia 151: 473-485

[36] *Stelzer, R.J., Ollerton, J. & Chittka, L.(2007) Keine Nachweis für Hummelbesuch

der Kanarischen Vogelblumen (Hymenoptera: Apidae). Entomologia Generalis 30: 153-154

[35] Ollerton, J. & Raguso, R. (2006) The sweetstench of decay.  New Phytologist 172: 382-385

[34] *Ollerton, J. (2006)  “Biological Barter”: patterns ofspecialization compared across different mutualisms.  Pp. 411—435 in: Waser, N.M. & Ollerton,J. (eds.) Plant-Pollinator Interactions:from Specialization to Generalization. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA

[33] *Ollerton, J. Johnson, S.D. & Hingston, A.B.(2006) Geographical variation in diversity and specificity of pollinationsystems.  Pp. 283—308 in:  Waser, N.M. & Ollerton, J. (eds.) Plant-Pollinator Interactions: fromSpecialization to Generalization. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA

[32] *Waser, N.M. & Ollerton, J. [eds.] (2006) Plant-Pollinator Interactions: fromSpecialization to Generalization. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA

[31] Ollerton, J. & Dafni, A. (2005) Functionalfloral morphology and phenology. pp. 1-26 in: Dafni, A., P.G. Kevan &Husband, B.C. (Eds.) PracticalPollination Biology. Enviroquest, Cambridge, Ontario

[30] Ollerton, J. (2005) Flowering time and theWallace Effect. Heredity 95: 181-182

[29] *Ollerton J., Johnson S. D., Cranmer, L. & Kellie, S. (2003) The pollinationecology of an assemblage of grassland asclepiads in South Africa. Annals of Botany 92: 807-83 

[28] *Ollerton, J. & Liede, S. (2003) Coronastructure in Cynanchum: linkingmorphology to function.  Ecotropica 9: 107-112

[27] Ollerton, J. (2002) Book review: Vuorisalo, T.O.& Mutikainen, P.K. (eds.) Life History Evolution in Plants.  PlantSystematics and Evolution 232: 138-141

[26] *Ollerton, J. & Cranmer, L. (2002) Latitudinaltrends in plant-pollinator interactions: are tropical plants more specialised? Oikos98:340-350

[25] *Ollerton,J. & Watts, S. (2000) Phenotype space and floral typology: towards anobjective assessment of pollination syndromes. Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi I.Matematisk-Naturvitenskapelig Klasse, Avhandlinger, Ny Serie 39: 149-159

[24] *Totland,Ø., Armbruster, W.S., Fenster, C., Molau, U., Nilsson, L.A., Olesen, J.M.,Ollerton, J., Philipp, M. & Ågren, J. [eds.] (2000) The ScandinavianAssociation for Pollination Ecology honours Knut Fægri. Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi I. Matematisk-Naturvitenskapelig Klasse,Avhandlinger, Ny Serie 39: The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters,Oslo

[23] *Lamborn, E.& Ollerton, J. (2000) Experimental assessment of the functional morphologyof inflorescences of Daucus carota(Apiaceae): testing the "fly catcher effect".  FunctionalEcology 14: 445-454

[22] Ollerton, J.(1999) The evolution of pollinator-plant relationships within thearthropods.  pp. 741-758 in Melic, A.,DeHaro, J.J., Mendez, M. & Ribera, I. (eds.)  Evolutionand Phylogeny of the Arthropoda. Entomological Society of Aragon, Zaragoza

[21] Ollerton, J.(1999) Fly trapping in Ceropegiaflowers - evidence of ant predation of pollinators.  Asklepios77: 31-32

[20] *Ollerton,J. & Diaz, A. (1999)  Evidence forstabilising selection acting on flowering time in Arum maculatum (Araceae): the influence of phylogeny onadaptation.  Oecologia 119: 340-348

[18] *Kite, G.C.,Hetterscheid, W.L.A., Lewis, M.J., Boyce, P.C., Ollerton, J., Cocklin, E.,Diaz, A., & Simmonds, M.S.J. (1998) Inflorescence odours and pollinators of Arum and Amorphophallus(Araceae).   pp. 295-315 in Owens, S.J.& Rudall, P.J. (eds.) ReproductiveBiology in Systematics, Conservation and Economic Botany.  Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

[18] Ollerton, J.(1998) Sunbird surprise for syndromes.  Nature 394: 726-727

[17] Ollerton, J.& McCollin, D. (1998) Insect and angiosperm diversity in marineenvironments: a response to van der Hage.  Functional Ecology 12: 976-977

[16] *Ollerton,J. & Lack, A.J. (1998) Relationships between flowering phenology, plantsize and reproductive success in Lotuscorniculatus (Fabaceae).  Plant Ecology 139: 35-47

[15] *Ollerton,J. & Liede, S. (1997) Pollination systems in the Asclepiadaceae: a surveyand preliminary analysis.  Biological Journal of the Linnean Society62: 593-610

[14] *Goulson, D.Ollerton, J. & Sluman, C. (1997) Foraging strategies in the small skipper butterfly, Thymelicus flavus; when to switch? Animal Behaviour 53: 1009-1016

[13] *Ollerton,J. (1996) Reconciling ecological processes with phylogenetic patterns: theapparent paradox of plant-pollinator systems. Journal of Ecology 84: 767-769

[12] *Ollerton,J. (1996) Interactions between gall midges (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) andinflorescences of Piper novae-hollandiae(Piperaceae) in Australia.  The Entomologist 115: 181-184

[11] *Ollerton,J. & Lack, A.J. (1996) Partial predispersal seed predation in Lotus corniculatus L. (Fabaceae).  SeedScience Research 6: 65-69

[10] *Waser,N.M., Chittka, L., Price, M.V., Williams, N. & Ollerton, J. (1996)Generalization in pollination systems, and why it matters.  Ecology 77: 1043-1060

[9] Ollerton, J.(1996) An update of the ASCLEPOL project. Asklepios67: 31-32

[8] Ollerton, J. & Forster, P. (1995) Dipteraassociated with flowers of Ceropegiacumingiana in Australia. Asklepios66: 21-22

[7] Ollerton & Lack (1993) Plant phenology -selection and neutrality – reply.  Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8: 35-35

[6] *Ollerton, J.& Lack, A.J. (1992) Flowering phenology: an example of relaxation ofnatural selection?  Trends in Ecology and Evolution 7: 274-276

[5] Ollerton, J.(1992) Asclepiad cultivation in the early 19th Century: part 2.  Asklepios57: 22-23

[4] Ollerton, J.(1992) Asclepiad cultivation in the early 19th Century: part 1.  Asklepios56: 27-28

[3] Ollerton, J.(1989) A lesson from the students.  New Scientist 1685: 69

[2] Ollerton, J.(1989) The Walls of the Garden. OxfordWildlife News 4: 1-2

[1] Ollerton, J.(1986) Adaptations to arid environments in the Asclepiadaceae. British Cactus and Succulent Journal 4:94-98



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