News & Media Highlights

Current Happenings

May 2024— Our manuscript on global pollinator limitation in crops was officially accepted by Nature Ecology and Evolution (Katie lead author)! Excited to see this finally in print. Update: Paper is now available online, full text version here! And, blogpost summary.

April 2024— Fieldwork season is underway: We have four technicians and 1 Winfree lab graduate student, Joanna Greenwood, who will be staying at the Yale Myers Forest Camp throughout the spring and collecting forest bees throughout CT, MA, NH, VT, and ME. That’s a lot of drive time for our regional study on pollinators in working forests! We’ll be testing the effects of shelterwood vs. clear cut timber harvesting on forest bee communities and their foraging.

2024 Field tech, Rowan Macy, hikes out to one of our VT research sites in the Green Mts.

December 31 2023— Our newest honorary lab member, Nolan Day Turo, was born just in time to ring in the new year! Katie will be on parental leave until the start of spring.

November 2023— Katie and 2 Winfree lab graduate students, Dylan Simpson and Max McCarthy, presented at the Entomological Society of America conference in National Harbor, MD.

June 2023— And, that’s a wrap on our first year of sampling at the Yale Myers Forest! We’re all very curious to see if our hanging canopy traps caught different species than on our understory traps. Watch the video at right for a sneak peek on how we check our traps every 10-14 days. Update: We caught over 12,000 individual bees— stay tuned as we sift through this huge collection and identify species!

April 2023— Although based in New Jersey at Rutgers University, our research keeps heading northward into the deciduous forests of New England. Joanna Greenwood (picture at left) and Katie are now partnering with the Yale Myers Forest in Connecticut for a 2 year study on forest-associated bees within managed forests. Since 1992, Yale has harvested one 6-8 hectare plot of land and then left this land to undergo stand development. We’ll be using this chronoseries to test how forest bee communities respond to stand development following a shelterwood harvest.

Dec 2022— Katie is off to Edinburgh, Scotland to present at the British Ecological Society Meeting. Hoping our results on global patterns of pollinator limitation will attract interest from the international crowd.

Aug 2022— The whole Winfree lab is off to Montreal for our first post-covid Ecology meeting. Lots of excitement and energy about meeting other scientists in person!

April 2022— Katie’s paper in Journal of Applied Ecology was shortlisted for the Southwood Prize for the best paper in 2021 by an early career researcher.

March 2022— Sam Wilhelm and Joe Giulian join the Turo forest bee research team! The bees in NJ are already out foraging in March (and will probably be flying earlier each year with climate change…). Our goal is to collect foraging females from spring forests throughout NJ. We’ll then be washing the pollen off individual bees and analyzing their foraging with pollen metabarcoding. (Picture of an end of season kayak trip/celebration)

Nov 2021— Thanks to the Comstock Award for excellent graduate students, Katie attended the Entomological Society of America conference in Denver, CO.

Sept 2021— Katie joins the Winfree lab at Rutgers University! Postdoc fellowship and research funding provided by USDA NIFA.


Media Highlights

Utah Public Radio

UnDisciplined: City-Living Bees