Publications of Michael L. Smith
All genres
Journal Article (36)
1.
Journal Article
70 (4), pp. 405 - 412 (2023)
Honey bees perform fine-scale detailing that continuously reduces comb area after nest expansion. Insectes Sociaux 2.
Journal Article
290 (1998), 20222565 (2023)
Manipulating nest architecture reveals three-dimensional building strategies and colony resilience in honeybees. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences (London) 3.
Journal Article
203, pp. 207 - 223 (2023)
Honey bee drones are synchronously hyperactive inside the nest. Animal Behaviour 4.
Journal Article
21 (7), e3002211 (2023)
Honey bees and social wasps reach convergent architectural solutions to nest-building problems. PLoS Biology 5.
Journal Article
54 (1), 13 (2023)
Dynamics of honey bee colony death and its implications for Varroa destructor mite transmission using observation hives. Apidologie 6.
Journal Article
25 (9), 104842 (2022)
Behavioral variation across the days and lives of honey bees. iScience 7.
Journal Article
12, 1110 (2021)
Social networks predict the life and death of honey bees. Nature Communications 8.
Journal Article
9, 581222 (2021)
Hierarchical approach for comparing collective behavior across scales: Cellular systems to honey bee colonies. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9.
Journal Article
118 (31), e2103605118 (2021)
Imperfect comb construction reveals the architectural abilities of honeybees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 10.
Journal Article
287, 20200877 (2020)
A scientist like me: demographic analysis of biology textbooks reveals both progress and long-term lags. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 11.
Journal Article
10 (1), 3746 (2020)
Artificial shaking signals in honey bee colonies elicit natural responses. Scientific Reports 12.
Journal Article
45 (3), pp. 679 - 687 (2020)
Colony-level chemical profiles do not provide reliable information about colony size in the honey bee. Ecological Entomology 13.
Journal Article
72 (12), pp. 2810 - 2817 (2018)
Queenless honey bees build infrastructure for direct reproduction until their new queen proves her worth. Evolution: International journal of organic evolution 14.
Journal Article
360 (6395), p. 1370 - 1370 (2018)
Dinner without reservations. Science 15.
Journal Article
2018 (May), pp. 585 - 588 (2018)
Who steals from a honey stand? American Bee Journal 16.
Journal Article
71 (11), 169 (2017)
Larger but not louder: Bigger honey bee colonies have quieter combs. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 17.
Journal Article
220 (9), pp. 1597 - 1605 (2017)
The cues of colony size: How honey bees sense that their colony is large enough to begin to invest in reproduction. The Journal of Experimental Biology 18.
Journal Article
2017 (April), pp. 345 - 346 (2017)
Silly science not so: Senator Flake’s wastebook and science-funding advice. American Bee Journal 19.
Journal Article
11 (12), e0167798 (2016)
Varroa destructor mites can nimbly climb from flowers onto foraging honey bees. PLoS One 20.
Journal Article
63 (4), pp. 553 - 563 (2016)
Honey bee sociometry: Tracking honey bee colonies and their nest contents from colony founding until death. Insectes Sociaux