Harriet Lambert

About

My research focuses on the ecology, evolution, and conservation of social bees. I am particularly interested in bee behaviour and the mechanisms underpinning intra- and interspecific plant-pollinator communication. During my PhD, I discovered a novel behaviour in bumblebees and explored its significance and implications for bumble bee colonies and bee-plant interactions. I used laboratory, semi-natural and behavioural experiments to show how Bombus terrestris workers use their mouthparts to routinely damage plant leaves. I have investigated the triggers for this behaviour and its effect on flowering time using a variety of assays. During my PostDoc, I have investigated the ecological relevance of this behaviour, by examining fitness implications of food scarcity, as well as the behavioural preferences of bees in natural experiments. In my future work, I plan to work increasingly in natural settings, investigating the effects of floral resource availability on the behaviour, resource use and reproduction of bumble bees in human-modified landscapes. I am passionate about open science, science communication and collaborating with researchers from diverse disciplines and backgrounds.

Work

ETH Zurich
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Postdoctoral Researcher

Switzerland

ETH Zurich
|

PhD researcher

Switzerland

Education

ETH Zurich
Switzerland

PhD

Imperial College London
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

MSc in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation

University of Oxford
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Biological Sciences

Publications

Fine-scale variation in pollen availability influences Bombus terrestris colony behaviour, development and fitness

Summary

preprint

Honeybees collect pollen from the buzz-pollinated flowers of invasive Solanum elaeagnifolium in Northern Greece

Summary

preprint

Bumble bee leaf damaging behaviour: effects on flowering time and implications for ecology and evolution

Published by

PhD Dissertation, Department of Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zürich

Summary

dissertation-thesis

Bumble bees damage plant leaves and accelerate flower production when pollen is scarce

Published by

Science

Summary

journal-article

Recovery Dynamics of Bees and Syrphid Flies to Restorative Land-use Transitions

Published by

MSc Thesis, Department of Life Sciences, Silwood Park, Imperial College London

Summary

dissertation-thesis