Publications
Cane, J. H. 1997. Violent weather and bees: populations of the barrier island endemic, Hesperapis oraria (Hymenoptera: Melittidae) survive a category 3 hurricane. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 70:73–75.
Cane, J. H. 2001. Habitat fragmentation and native bees: a premature verdict? Conservation Ecology 5:149–161.
Cane, J. H. 2003. Exotic non-social bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) in North America: Ecological implications. Pages 113–126 in K. V. Strickler and J. H. Cane, editors. Thomas Say Publications in Entomology, Entomological Society of America, Lanham, MD.
Cane, J. H. 2005. Bees, pollination, and the challenges of sprawl. Pages 109–124 in E. Johnson and M. Klemens, editors. Columbia Univ. Press, New York.
Cane, J. H. 2008. Pollinating bees crucial to farming wildflower seed for U.S. habitat restoration. Pages 48–64 in R. R. James and T. L. Pitts-Singer, editors. Oxford Univ. Press, NY.
Cane, J. H. 2011. Meeting wild bees’ needs on western US rangelands. Rangelands 33:27–32.
Cane, J. H. 2015. Landscaping pebbles attract nesting by the native ground-nesting bee Halictus rubicundus (Hymenoptera: Halictidae). Apidologie 6:728–734.
Cane, J. H. 2021. Global warming, advancing bloom and evidence for pollinator plasticity from long-term bee emergence monitoring. Insects 12:457.
Cane, J. H., and L. J. Kervin. 2009. Gardening for Native Bees in Utah and Beyond. Logan, UT.
Cane, J. H., and B. Love. 2016. Floral guilds of bees in sagebrush steppe: Comparing bee usage of wildflowers available for postfire restoration. Natural Areas Journal 36:377–391.
Cane, J. H., R. L. Minckley, L. J. Kervin, and T. H. Roulston. 2005. Temporally persistent patterns of incidence and abundance in a pollinator guild at annual and decadal scales: the bees of Larrea tridentata. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, London 85:319–329.
Cane, J. H., R. L. Minckley, T. H. Roulston, L. J. Kervin, and N. M. Williams. 2006. Complex responses within a desert bee guild (Hymenoptera: Apiformes) to urban habitat fragmentation. Ecological Applications 16:632–644.
Cane, J. H., and J. L. Neff. 2011. Predicted fates of ground-nesting bees in soil heated by wildfire: Thermal tolerances of life stages and a survey of nesting depths. Biological Conservation 144:2631–2636.
Cane, J. H., and J. A. Payne. 1993. Regional, annual and seasonal variation in pollinator guilds: intrinsic traits of bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) underlie their patterns of abundance at Vaccinium ashei (Ericaceae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 86:577–588.
Cane, J. H., R. R. Snelling, L. J. Kervin, and G. C. Eickwort. 1996. A new monolectic coastal bee, Hesperapis oraria Snelling and Stage (Hymenoptera: Melittidae), with a review of desert and neotropical disjunctives in the southeastern U.S. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 69:238–247.
Cane, J. H., and V. J. Tepedino. 2001. Causes and extent of declines among native North American invertebrate pollinators: Detection, evidence, and consequences. Conservation Ecology 5:17–26.
Cane, J. H., and V. J. Tepedino. 2016. Gauging the effect of honey bee pollen collection on native bee communities. Conservation Letters 10:205–210.
Colla, S. R., J. S. Ascher, M. Arduser, J. H. Cane, M. Deyrup, S. Droege, J. Gibbs, T. Griswold, H. G. Hall, C. Henne, J. Neff, R. P. Jean, M. G. Rightmyer, C. Sheffield, M. Veit, and A. Wolf. 2012. Documenting persistence of most eastern North American bee species (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Anthophila) to 1990-2009. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 85:14–22.
Galbraith, S. M., J. H. Cane, A. R. Moldenke, and J. W. Rivers. 2019a. Salvage logging reduces wild bee diversity, but not abundance, in severely burned mixed-conifer forest. Forest Ecology and Management 453:117622.
Galbraith, S. M., J. H. Cane, A. R. Moldenke, and J. W. Rivers. 2019b. Wild bee diversity increases with local fire severity in a fire-prone landscape. Ecosphere 10:e02668.
LeBuhn, G., S. Droege, E. F. Connor, B. Gemmill-Herren, S. G. Potts, R. L. Minckley, T. Griswold, R. Jean, E. Kula, D. W. Roubik, J. Cane, K. W. Wright, G. Frankie, and F. Parker. 2013. Detecting insect pollinator declines on regional and global scales. Conservation Biology 27:113–120.
Minckley, R. L., J. H. Cane, and L. Kervin. 2000. Origins and ecological consequences of pollen specialization among desert bees. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 267:265–271.
Minckley, R. L., J. H. Cane, L. Kervin, and T. H. Roulston. 1999. Spatial predictability and resource specialization of bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) at a superabundant, widespread resource. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 67:119–147.
Minckley, R. L., J. H. Cane, L. Kervin, and D. Yanega. 2003. Biological impediments to measures of competition among introduced honey bees and desert bees (Hymenoptera: Apiformes). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 76:306–319.