Biology, Ecology and Conservation of Pollinators (Primarily Bees)

Menu Display

Menü
- Biology, Ecology and Conservation of Pollinators (Primarily Bees) - DAAMBA – Domestic Anthropic Activity Markers of Bronze Age settlements: A multiproxy methodological approach to understand household related activities - Decomposition Studies - Descriptive and ecological assessment of the spread of invasive alien tree species - Conservation Botany - Ecosystem Services - Effects of renewable energy production on the environment and nature - Effectiveness of Game Feeding - Examination of the relationship between the settlements of the Budapest agglomeration as a regional center along various indicator - Examination of Wild Boar Effects in Grassland Area - Heteropteras in Hungary - Investigation of the Spread and Impact of Invasive Predator Species - The Impact of Domestic Cats on the Domestic Population of European Wildcats - National Scolopax rusticola Monitoring Program - National Laboratory for Health Security - Hungarian Game Management Database - Impact of earthworms on soil and ecosystem services in protected natural and cultivated areas - Investigation of the effects of feeding places for hunting purposes on natural habitats - Nematological Diagnostics - Our Arrival to Central Europe (Visegrad Fund project) - Plant Population Biology - Role of Large Predator Species - Study of Invasive Plant-Eating Species - Taxonomy of Firebugs - The Wildlife Management and Conservation Role of the Golden Jackal - Toxic Effects of Microplastics - Soil Ecology - Soil Zoology - Soil Ecotoxicology - Wildlife Impact Studies, Investigation of Game Damage - Behavioral Ecology, Bird Monitoring - Participation in the FLOTT - River, landscape and settlement in the Middle Ages project - Survey of protected plant species in abandoned vineyards - YMPACT - The Yamnaya Impact on Preshistoric Europe - Conservation assessment of forest steppe vegetation at different spatial and temporal scales

Biology, Ecology, and Conservation of Pollinators (Primarily Bees)

Last modified: 21. February 2024

Biology, Ecology, and Conservation of Pollinators (Primarily Bees)


Our department has a long-standing tradition in studying the biology, ecology, and pollination activities of wild bees. In addition to faunistic surveys, we participate in various habitat and landscape-scale pollinator studies, examining the efficiency of pollinator-friendly habitats in agricultural or urban areas. Our research plans also include involvement in the development and testing of smart beehives and the creation of a digital database for Hungarian beekeeping. We are planning to initiate toxicological studies on bees in collaboration with experts in ecotoxicology.

Participating researchers:
Dr. Miklós Sárospataki     https://m2.mtmt.hu/gui2/?type=authors&mode=browse&sel=authors10009796
Gabriella Győri
Dr. Anita Szabó-Bartók