Search results for "Pollination"

showing 10 items of 114 documents

REVISION OF PLETHIANDRA HOOK.F.: A POLYSTAMINATE, EAST ASIAN GENUS OF MELASTOMATACEAE

2006

Plethiandra (Melastomataceae–Melastomatoideae–Dissochaeteae) comprises seven species in Borneo and one (P. sessiliflora) in the southern part of Peninsular Malaysia and central Sumatra. Plethiandra is easily recognized by its polystaminate androecium, having 16–40 stamens with short, straight, inappendiculate anthers. The closely related Medinilla has a diplostemonous androecium with 8–12 stamens and variously appendaged anthers. Ontogenetic studies in P. hookeri show that the increase in stamen number in Plethiandra results from subdivision of the stamen primordia into three or more subprimordia.This paper provides a key, genus and species descriptions including diagnostic characters, dist…

MedinillabiologyPollinationGenusMelastomataceaeBotanyStamenKey (lock)Biological dispersalPlant ScienceEpiphytebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEdinburgh Journal of Botany
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Abeilles et plantes cultivées en Espagne : actualisation des données pour le melon, la pastèque et l’amandier

2021

[EN] Pollinators of most of the plants cultivated in the Mediterranean regions of Europe are still unknown. We provide new data and we review previously available information on bees (Apoidea) associated with three economically important crops in Spain: melon (Cucumis melo L.), watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.) Matsum. & Nakai) and almond (Prunus dulcis (Mill.) D.A.Webb). We found that, overall, 98 bee species spanning four families visit flowers of the studied crop species, and 46 additional species were sampled within the crops with pan-traps. The bee assemblages visiting melon include 7–33 species, with moderate to high importance of small Lasioglossum (Halictidae) and of honey bee …

Mediterranean climatebiologyPollinationbusiness.industryMelonAgriculturaAgricultureHymenopterabiology.organism_classificationLasioglossumAbellesHymenopteraApoideaLasioglossumAgronomyApisAgriculturePollinatorSpainInsect SciencebusinessPollinationApoideaEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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2015

The explosive pollination mechanism of the prayer plants (Marantaceae) is unique among plants. After a tactile stimulus by a pollinator, the style curls up rapidly and mediates pollen exchange. It is still under discussion whether this explosive movement is released electrophysiologically, i.e. by a change in the membrane potential (as in Venus flytrap), or purely mechanically. In the present study, electrophysiological experiments are conducted to clarify the mechanism. Artificial release experiments (chemical and electrical) and electrophysiological measurements were conducted with two phylogenetically distant species, Goeppertia bachemiana (E. Morren) Borchs. & S. Suarez and Donax cannif…

Membrane potentialElectrophysiologyMultidisciplinarybiologyPollinationExplosive materialMarantaceaeBotanyBiophysicsElectrophysiological PhenomenaVenus flytrapStimulus (physiology)biology.organism_classificationPLOS ONE
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Pollination and reproductive success of two colour variants of a deceptive orchid, Dactylorhiza maculata (Orchidaceae)

2002

Polymorphism in petal colour is common in deceptively pollinated plant species. Most of the deceptively pollinated orchids are food frauds, and in most of them, the deception is not mimetic. These plants have conspicuously coloured flowers which they use as the main attractant of naive pollinators. In a field experiment, we studied the response of bumblebees and other types of flower visitors to colour differences between experimentally paired plants of Dactylorhiza maculata, a nectarless food-deceptive species. In addition, pollen removal, an estimate of male fitness, and fruit production, an estimate of female fitness, were measured in the two colour variants. We found a trend of bumblebe…

OrchidaceaeDactylorhiza maculataInflorescencebiologyPollinationReproductive successPollinatorBotanyPetalPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBumblebeeNordic Journal of Botany
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Position-dependent reproductive success of flowers in Dactylorhiza maculata (Orchidaceae)

2000

1. This study explores the importance of flower position for reproductive success of individual flowers of the deceptive terrestrial orchid, Dactylorhiza maculata (L.) Soo. 2. Upper flowers had smaller lips and produced lighter pollinia than those in other parts of the inflorescence, probably due to architectural effects. 3. Dry weight of seed capsules decreased from bottom to top in the inflorescence in both open-pollinated and hand-pollinated plants. However, removal of flowers from the middle and lowest parts of the inflorescence considerably increased seed production of the upper flowers. Decreased seed set was due to decreased resource availability because of the long maintenance time …

OrchidaceaeDactylorhiza maculataInflorescencebiologyPollinationReproductive successPollinatorOrnamental plantBotanyOvary (botany)biology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFunctional Ecology
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The chemical composition of the floral extract of Epipogium Aphyllum sw. (Orchidaceae): A cluefor thier pollination biology

2014

Epipogium aphyllum is a rare European obligate mycoheterotrophic orchid lacking chlorophyll. It has not been studied previously with respect to pollination biology. We studied the association between the composition of floral scent emission and its pollination systems. Field observation indicates that the main pollinators of Epipogium aphyllum are representatives of the genus Bombus (Hymenoptera), B. lucorum, B. hortorum, B. terrestris, B. pascuorum and B. proteus, and the genus Apis (Hymenoptera) namely A. mellifera. The main potential vector (observed to accidentally carry pollen), is most likely Episyrphus balteatus (Diptera, Syrphidae). The chemical composition of the floral extracts of…

OrchidaceaeMethyl cinnamatebiologyPollinationNonacosanebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeEpipogium aphyllumGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologychemistry.chemical_compoundlcsh:Biology (General)chemistryEpipogium aphyllumPollinatorPollenEpisyrphus balteatusBotanymedicineGeneral Agricultural and Biological Scienceslcsh:QH301-705.5floral extractpollination strategyArchives of Biological Sciences
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Deceptive pollination of Dactylorhiza incarnata: an experimental test of the magnet species hypothesis

1994

Floral deception, which mainly appears in highly evolved families such as Orchidaceae, was studied in Central Finland. In nectarless Dactylorhiza incarnata, the deceptive pollination system has been considered to function best in remote habitats such as marshes, where flowering plants attractive to pollinators are rare (remote habitats hypothesis). In contrast, the magnet-species theory predicts that a nectarless plant benefits from growing in the vicinity of nectarcontaining species. We tested these hypotheses by adding attractive, nectar-containg violets (Viola x wittrockiana) to orchid populations. The percentage of fruit set in D. incarnata was adversely affected by the violets, probabl…

OrchidaceaePollinationbiologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)PollinatorBotanyDactylorhiza incarnataNectarEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsViolaceaemedia_commonOecologia
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Nutrient versus pollination limitation in Platanthera bifolia and Dactylorhiza incarnata (Orchidaceae)

2000

Availability of resources and pollination services have been demonstrated to have impact on reproductive success in some orchid species, but to our knowledge no studies have examined the effects of nutrient application and pollination limitation in the same experiment. In this study, factors limiting reproductive success were studied with two terrestrial orchid species in Central Finland during 1996 and 1997. In a field experiment using a factorial design, plants of nectar-producing Platanthera bifolia and nectarless Dactylorhiza incarnata were treated with nutrient application and hand-pollination. Inflorescence size was considered as an indicator of attractiveness to pollinators as well a…

OrchidaceaeReproductive successInflorescencebiologyPollinationPollinatorBotanyfood and beveragesNectarDactylorhiza incarnataPlatanthera bifoliabiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOikos
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Ontogenetic and phylogenetic diversification of the hooded staminode in Marantaceae

2010

The flowers of Marantaceae are known for their unique pollination mechanism mediated by an explosive style movement. The mechanism is based on the highly modified elements of the inner androecial whorl, i.e., the single half-fertile anther and the fleshy and hooded staminodes. We investigated 67 species across 24 genera to elucidate which parts of the hooded staminode are shared by all species, thus likely under strong selection pressure, and which are allowed to vary. We treated hooded staminodes as character syndromes and grouped them based on gross similarities. We identified characters underlying the similarity and investigated their diversity and developmental pathways. All hooded stam…

Phylogenetic treebiologyPollinationOntogenyStaminodeMarantaceaeStamenPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationEvolutionary biologyBotanyCladeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsWhorl (botany)TAXON
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A new self-compatibility haplotype in the sweet cherry 'Kronio', S5' attributable to a pollen-part mutation in the SFB gene

2008

‘Kronio’ is a Sicilian cultivar of sweet cherry (Prunus avium), nominally with the incompatibility genotype S 5 S 6 , that is reported to be naturally self-compatible. In this work the cause of its self-compatibility was investigated. Test selfing confirmed self-compatibility and provided embryos for analysis; PCR with consensus primers designed to amplify S-RNase and SFB alleles showed that the embryos were of two types, S 5 S 5 and S 5 S 6 , indicating that S 6 pollen failed, but S 5 succeeded, perhaps because of a mutation in the pollen or stylar component. Stylar RNase analysis indicated active S-RNases for both S 5 and S 6 . The S-RNase alleles were cloned and sequenced; and sequences …

PhysiologyMolecular Sequence DataPlant ScienceFlowersBiologyPolymerase Chain ReactionPrunusRibonucleasesChromosome SegregationGenotypeAmino Acid SequencePollinationGeneAllelesCrosses GeneticGeneticsF-Box ProteinsHaplotypeIntronfood and beveragesSelfingSequence Analysis DNAHaplotypesSeedlingsMutationMicrosatellitePrunusPloidy
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