Research
Making scientific research accessible
Here, you’ll find easy-to-read summaries of scientifically rigorous, evidence-based and peer-reviewed publications from around the world to help you better plan, build, and manage ecologically sustainable linear infrastructure.
Research summaries are listed chronologically according to when they were published here.
To find information on a specific topic, please use the SEARCH function below to filter by keywords, including topic, species, location and/or author.
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Mortality of bumblebee queens increases with traffic volume
Managing road verges to promote flowers has been proposed as a conservation tool for pollinating insects in many parts of the world but there is a concern that these habitats might be attracting the insects to a highly deadly environment. We investigated whether traffic mortality of bumblebee queens was impacted by the flowering plant diversity in the road verge and the traffic volume and found that the probability of observing dead queens quadrupled when traffic increased from 100 to 6000 vehicles per day.
Road verges are corridors and roads are barriers for the movements of flower-visiting insects
The opposite effects of roads (barriers) and road verges (corridors) have been not studied simultaneously and it is therefore unknown what the overall effect of road infrastructure is on the populations of pollinating insects. We used an experimental approach that allowed us to simulate pollen transfer between flowers placed in road verges with different flower densities to track the movement of flower-visiting insects in road environments.
Traffic-regulated street lights to reduce impacts of light pollution: Good news for nocturnal insects and bats?
Demand-controlled LED street lights are only fully illuminated when there is traffic and dimmed in the absence of traffic. In our study, dimming reduced the light on average by 35%. Effects of dimmed light on the abundances of nocturnal insects and bats were generally beneficial as fewer insects went into traps and fewer bat signals were recorded when the lights were dimmed.
Motorways change grasshopper and cricket assemblages in a Croatian grassland
We investigated the spatial changes in grasshopper and cricket assemblages in relation to a motorway passing through unmanaged grassland habitat in Croatia. For the first time, our results show that motorways affect grasshoppers and crickets at this level, with both detrimental and beneficial effects on their diversity, depending on the distance from the road.