Search results for "Angelonia"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

THE DIASCIA FLOWER AND ITS BEE - AN OIL-BASED SYMBIOSIS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA

1984

As has been formerly shown, the double-spurred flowers of the South African genus Diascia (Scrophulariaceae) produce fatty oil as a primary attractant. Their oil-collecting pollinators have so far remained unknown. It is concluded from the morphology and from direct evidence of flower visitation that the recently established Melittid genus Rediviva represents the co-evolved pollinator group of these plants, at the same time demonstrating the presence of “manual” oil collectors in Southern Africa. The bees must introduce their especially equipped forelegs into the paired spurs of Diascia for harvesting the oil, thereby pollinating the flower. In the described case, a new species, Rediviva em…

AndrenabiologyCalceolariaPollinatorAngeloniaBotanyBowkeriaPlant ScienceRedivivaCentrisbiology.organism_classificationMelittidaeActa Botanica Neerlandica
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Pollination of four sympatric species ofAngelonia (Scrophulariaceae) by oil-collecting bees in NE. Brazil

1991

The manner whereby the oil-producing bisaccate flowers ofAngelonia (Scrophulariaceae) are pollinated by female oil-collecting bees is reported for the first time. Observations were made in the Caatinga formation of Pernambuco, NE. Brazil, on four synchronopatric species. These differ in sizes and structural details of the corolla, level of flower exposition, and habitat preferences. All legitimate visitors wereCentris spp. (Anthophoridae):Angelonia hirta was mainly pollinated byC. fuscata andA. pubescens byC. hyptidis; A. bisaccata andA. hookeriana shared an unidentified species. Several exomalopsine, tetrapediine and meliponid bees exploit the flowers less descriminately for oil or pollen,…

biologyPollinationAngeloniaClypeusPlant ScienceCentrisbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeOligolectyApoideaPollinatorPollenBotanymedicineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
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