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91亚色 creates new hive of interdisciplinary bee research

Researchers from disciplines across 91亚色, including biologists, social scientists and mathematicians, will develop a hive of research when 91亚色鈥檚 new  (BEEc) becomes an Organized Research Unit (ORU) starting July 1.

The Senate of 91亚色 approved the move earlier this year to make BEEc the University鈥檚 26th ORU, enabling it to dive deeper into the crisis affecting the health and decline of bees globally.

鈥91亚色鈥檚 ORUs have a strong history of highly innovative and collaborative research,鈥 said Vice-President Research & Innovation Amir Asif. 鈥淪teeped in 91亚色鈥檚 tradition of collegial interdisciplinarity, ORUs serve as synergistic hubs for participatory research programs that bring together expertise from across disciplines.鈥

The new ORU will provide a place where experts can collaborate on innovative, cutting-edge research on bees to help further knowledge, train future leaders in the field, educate the public and affect policy that will make a difference for pollinators locally, as well as globally.

鈥淲e are thrilled that our proposal was approved by Senate. The bee crisis is multidimensional and there is no simple solution. BEEc will allow us to bring talented biologists and mathematicians, but also engineers, social scientists and economists to help us answer the big questions in the field,鈥 says Amro Zayed, research chair in Genomics and BEEc director.

BEEc researchers will study the health, behaviour, biodiversity, genomics and conservation of bees, with the goal of enhancing their long-term sustainability, and that of the important crops and plants that rely on bees for pollination.

Meet some of the core researchers:

Associate  of the Faculty of Science uses genomics to understand why native bees and honey bees are declining, and develops tools to circumvent these declines.

Assistant Professor  of the Faculty of Environmental Studies researches native bees to find out why they鈥檙e in decline and develops conservation efforts with a special focus on at-risk bumblebees.

Professor , a Distinguished Research Professor, studies native bees and is constantly contributing new species records to the global list of over 20,300 species. He has built and continues to maintain the largest Canadian collection of bees, currently estimated at over 500,000 specimens from all over the globe.

Professor  of the Faculty of Science is an expert on social insect genomics and pollinator health combining molecular evolution, behavioural ecology, population genetics, and phylogenetics to understand the sociobiology, biogeography, nutritional requirements, and sustainability of bees.

Professor  of the Faculty of Science and director of 91亚色鈥檚 Centre for Disease Modelling is applying her modelling skills to help understand how pathogens and pests affect colony health.

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