10.1371/journal.pone.0011753.s001 John Cussans John Cussans David Goulson David Goulson Roy Sanderson Roy Sanderson Louis Goffe Louis Goffe Ben Darvill Ben Darvill Juliet L. Osborne Juliet L. Osborne Table S1 - Two Bee-Pollinated Plant Species Show Higher Seed Production when Grown in Gardens Compared to Arable Farmland Public Library of Science 2010 bee-pollinated higher grown gardens compared arable farmland 2010-07-23 00:41:40 Dataset https://plos.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Two_Bee_Pollinated_Plant_Species_Show_Higher_Seed_Production_when_Grown_in_Gardens_Compared_to_Arable_Farmland/142500 <p>List of plants recorded in field margins and garden borders. Plants are listed according to whether they were recorded only in the field margins (F), in both field margins and garden borders (F&G) or in only the garden borders (G). In the garden borders it was not possible to identify all the plants to species so these species are grouped into genera. If a species is likely to be visited by bees then it is given a score of 1 (see explanation of in the <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0011753#s2" target="_blank">methods</a>), and these “bee forage plant species” species were used to estimate the flowers available to bees per 200 m transect in the analysis. If bees were actually observed visiting the plant species during the transects, then a Y appears in the 4th column. The final column indicates the number of experimental sites at which the species was recorded.</p> <p>(0.18 MB DOC)</p>