Fabrice Requier, Jean-Franc, Ois Odoux, Thierry Tamic, Nathalie Moreau, Mickaël Henry, Axel Decourtye, and Vincent Bretagnolle. 2015. Honey bee diet in intensive farmland habitats reveals an unexpectedly high flower richness and a major role of weeds. Ecological Applications 25:881–890. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/14-1011.1


Appendices

Appendix A: Study area, study design and sample sizes used in this study.
Ecological Archives A025-053-A1.

Appendix B: The number data samples for pollen and nectar.
Ecological Archives A025-053-A2.

Appendix C: List of plant species collected for (i) pollen and (ii) nectar, species affiliation within resource types and mass proportion (%), ranked the most to the least annually collected by resource type.
Ecological Archives A025-053-A3.

Appendix D: Annual phenological deviation estimated by cumulative temperature sum from a national French meteorological station (http://climat.meteofrance.com/) located in Niort, on the northern edge of the study area.
Ecological Archives A025-053-A4.

Appendix E: Nutritional value of analysed pollen.
Ecological Archives A025-053-A5.

Appendix F: Seasonal patterns of (a) total brood area and (b) colony size of honey bee colonies from the same study area (redrawn from Odoux et al. (2014) with one year update (2008 to 2012).
Ecological Archives A025-053-A6.

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