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Asterisks** indicate undergraduate or Master’s degree students mentored


13. Bloom, E.H., T.J. Wood, K.-L.J. Hung, J.J. Ternest, L. Ingwell, K. Goodell, I. Kaplan & Z. Szendrei. 2021. Synergism between local- and landscape-level pesticides reduces wild bee floral visitation in pollinator-dependent crops. Journal of Applied Ecology, published online 07 April 2021, https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13871.

12. Hung, K.-L.J., S.S. Sandoval*, J.S. Ascher & D.A. Holway. 2021. Joint impacts of drought and habitat fragmentation on native bee assemblages in a California biodiversity hotspot. Insects 12:135.


11. Hung, K.-L.J., J.S. Ascher, J.A. Davids** & D.A. Holway. 2019. Ecological filtering in scrub fragments restructures the taxonomic and functional composition of native bee assemblages. Ecology 100:e02654. [NOTE: Article was selected as the cover feature for the journal issue.]

10. Hung, K.-L.J., J.M. Kingston**, A. Lee**, D.A. Holway & J.R. Kohn. 2019. Non-native honey bees numerically dominate abundant floral resources in a global hotspot of pollinator diversity. Proceedings of The Royal Society B 286:20182901. [NOTE: Hung and Kingston are equal-contribution authors.]

9. Hung, K.-L.J., J.M. Kingston**, M. Albrecht, D.A. Holway & J.R. Kohn. 2018. The worldwide importance of honey bees as pollinators in natural habitats. Proceedings of The Royal Society B 285:20172140.

8. Nabors, A.J.**, H.J. Cen**, K.-L.J. Hung, J.R. Kohn & D.A. Holway. 2018. The effect of removing numerically dominant, non-native honey bees on seed set of a native plant. Oecologia 186:281–289.

7. Hung, K.-L.J., J.S. Ascher & D.A. Holway. 2017. Urbanization-induced habitat fragmentation erodes multiple components of temporal diversity in a Southern California native bee assemblage. PLoS ONE 12: e0184136.

6. Schochet, A.B.**, K.-L.J. Hung & D.A. Holway. 2016. Bumble bee species exhibit divergent responses to urbanization in a Southern California landscape. Ecological Entomology 41:685–692.

5. Hung, K.-L.J., J.S. Ascher, J. Gibbs, R.E. Irwin & D.T. Bolger. 2015. Effects of fragmentation on a distinctive coastal sage scrub bee fauna revealed through incidental captures by pitfall traps. Journal of Insect Conservation 19:175–179.

4. Hanna, C, I. Naughton, C. Boser, R. Alarcón, K.-L.J. Hung & D.A. Holway. 2015. Floral visitation by the Argentine ant reduces bee visitation and plant seed set. Ecology 96:222–230.

3. Rightmyer, M.G., Y. Kono, J.R. Kohn & K.-L.J. Hung. 2014. A new species of Triepeolus (Hymenoptera: Apidae), with comments on T. utahensis (Cockerell) and T. melanarius Rightmyer. Zootaxa 3872:048-056.

2. LeVan, K.E., K.-L.J. Hung, K.R. McCann, J. Ludka & D.A. Holway. 2014. Floral visitation by the Argentine ant reduces pollinator visitation and seed set in the coast barrel cactus, Ferocactus viridescens. Oecologia 174:163–171.

1. Siepielski, A.M., K.-L.J. Hung, E.E.B. Bein & M.A. McPeek. 2010. Experimental evidence for neutral community dynamics governing an insect assemblage. Ecology 91:847–857.

Dr. Keng-Lou James Hung
Email: KLJHung@ou.edu
Address: 111 East Chesapeake St., Norman, OK 73019, USA