Scott H McArt
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Explore the profile of Scott H McArt including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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27
Citations
547
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Recent Articles
1.
De Souza D, Urbanowicz C, Ng W, Baert N, Fersch A, Smith M, et al.
Sci Rep
. 2024 Jul;
14(1):15709.
PMID: 38977768
Honey bees are commonly co-exposed to pesticides during crop pollination, including the fungicide captan and neonicotinoid insecticide thiamethoxam. We assessed the impact of exposure to these two pesticides individually and...
2.
Strang C, Rondeau S, Baert N, McArt S, Raine N, Muth F
Ecology
. 2024 Jun;
105(6):e4310.
PMID: 38828716
Agricultural intensification has been identified as one of the key causes of global insect biodiversity losses. These losses have been further linked to the widespread use of agrochemicals associated with...
3.
Ng W, Myers C, McArt S, Ellner S
Ecol Lett
. 2021 Dec;
25(2):453-465.
PMID: 34881492
Pathogen transport by biotic or abiotic processes (e.g. mechanical vectors, wind, rain) can increase disease transmission by creating more opportunities for host exposure. But transport without replication has an inherent...
4.
Davis A, Deutsch K, Torres A, Mata Loya M, Cody L, Harte E, et al.
Sci Rep
. 2021 Aug;
11(1):15852.
PMID: 34349198
Flowers can be transmission platforms for parasites that impact bee health, yet bees share floral resources with other pollinator taxa, such as flies, that may be hosts or non-host vectors...
5.
Newhouse A, Allwine A, Oakes A, Matthews D, McArt S, Powell W
Transgenic Res
. 2021 Jun;
30(6):751-764.
PMID: 34110572
Transgenic American chestnut trees expressing a wheat gene for oxalate oxidase (OxO) can tolerate chestnut blight, but as with any new restoration material, they should be carefully evaluated before being...
6.
Figueroa L, Compton S, Grab H, McArt S
Sci Rep
. 2021 Apr;
11(1):7529.
PMID: 33824396
Reports of pollinator declines have prompted efforts to understand contributing factors and protect vulnerable species. While pathogens can be widespread in bee communities, less is known about factors shaping pathogen...
7.
Figueroa L, Grincavitch C, McArt S
Parasitology
. 2020 Dec;
148(4):435-442.
PMID: 33256872
Pathogens and lack of floral resources interactively impair global pollinator health. However, epidemiological and nutritional studies aimed at understanding bee declines have historically focused on social species, with limited evaluations...
8.
Pinilla-Gallego M, Williams E, Davis A, Fitzgerald J, McArt S, Irwin R
Environ Entomol
. 2020 Sep;
49(6):1393-1401.
PMID: 32960211
Parasites are commonly cited as one of the causes of population declines for both managed and wild bees. Epidemiological models sometimes assume that increasing the proportion of infected individuals in...
9.
Floral traits affecting the transmission of beneficial and pathogenic pollinator-associated microbes
Adler L, Irwin R, McArt S, Vannette R
Curr Opin Insect Sci
. 2020 Sep;
44:1-7.
PMID: 32866657
Flowers provide resources for pollinators, and can also be transmission venues for beneficial or pathogenic pollinator-associated microbes. Floral traits could mediate transmission similarly for beneficial and pathogenic microbes, although some...
10.
Urbanowicz C, Muniz P, McArt S
Ecol Evol
. 2020 Jul;
10(13):6741-6751.
PMID: 32724547
Introduced plants may be important foraging resources for honey bees and wild pollinators, but how often and why pollinators visit introduced plants across an entire plant community is not well...