Search results for "Pollinator"

showing 10 items of 95 documents

Sex-specific patterns of antagonistic and mutualistic biotic interactions in dioecious and gynodioecious plants

2013

a b s t r a c t A major transition in flowering plants has been the evolution of separate sexes from hermaphroditism via gynodioecy which is considered to be the most important route. Biotic interactions, both antagonist and mutualistic, have been proposed to influence this transition which is generally accompanied by the evolution of sexual dimorphism in secondary sexual traits. While some researchers have studied sex- specific patterns in herbivory and pollination, less attention has been paid to pathogens/parasites and a limited number of studies have revised sex-specific patterns in mycorrhizal symbiosis. In this article, we explore sex-specific interactions in dioecious and gynodioecio…

Sexual dimorphismHerbivoreSymbiosisPollinationPollinatorEcologyParasite infestationta1181Plant ScienceGynodioecyBiologySex specificEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPerspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics
researchProduct

The breeding system of Fumana ericifolia: first evidence of autogamy in woody Cistaceae

2001

Fumana ericifolia belongs to the family Cistaceae, in which all perennial species previously studied have been reported to be self-incompatible and xenogamous. Here we show that F. ericifolia is self-compatible and autogamous. Its flowers last only four to eight hours and produce a small amount of pollen and ovules. Self-pollination depends on changes in the relative position of the stigma and the anthers, triggered by the abscission of the petals; this in turn causes closing of the sepals, which push the anthers onto the stigma. Pollen remains highly viable and germinable, and the stigma keeps its receptivity several hours after the loss of the petals. Hand pollination treatments revealed …

StamenPlant ScienceCistaceaeBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationPollinatorPollenSelf-pollinationBotanymedicinePollen tubePetalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHand-pollinationNordic Journal of Botany
researchProduct

Functional implications of the staminal lever mechanism in Salvia cyclostegia (Lamiaceae)

2011

Flower morphology and inflorescence architecture affect pollinator foraging behaviour and thereby influence the process of pollination and the reproductive success of plants. This study explored possible ecological functions of the lever-like stamens and the floral design in Salvia cyclostegia.Flower construction was experimentally manipulated by removing either the lower lever arms or the upper fertile thecae of the two stamens from a flower. The two types of manipulated individuals were intermixed with the control ones and randomly distributed in the population.Removing the sterile lower lever arms significantly reduced handling time per flower of the main pollinator, Bombus personatus. I…

Time FactorsbiologyReproductive successPollinationReproductionForagingStamenPlant ScienceOriginal ArticlesFlowersSalviaBeesbiology.organism_classificationGeitonogamyInflorescencePollinatorFruitBotanySeedsAnimalsSalviaPollination
researchProduct

Quantitative importance of staminodes for female reproductive success inParnassia palustrisunder contrasting environmental conditions

2003

The five sterile stamens, or staminodes, in Parnassia palustris act both as false and as true nectaries. They attract pollinators with their conspicuous, but non-rewarding tips, and also produce nectar at the base. We removed staminodes experimentally and compared pollinator visitation rate and duration and seed set in flowers with and without staminodes in two different populations. We also examined the relative importance of the staminode size to other plant traits. Finally, we bagged, emasculated, and supplementary cross-pollinated flowers to determine the pollination strategy and whether reproduction was limited by pollen availability. Flowers in both populations were highly dependent o…

VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Ecology: 488education.field_of_studyReproductive successPollinationVDP::Mathematics and natural science: 400::Zoology and botany: 480::Plant physiology: 492StaminodePopulationfood and beveragesParnassia palustrisFlowersPlant ScienceFertilization PlantsBiologymedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationPollinatorPollenBotanymedicinePollenNectareducationCanadian Journal of Botany
researchProduct

Les produits agrochimiques agissent de manière synergique sur la mortalité des abeilles

2021

Une méta-analyse, récemment publiée dans la revue internationale Nature, confirmel’effet délétère de la combinaison pesticides-parasites-malnutrition sur les abeilles, etrévèle que l’interaction synergique entre différents produits agrochimiques a un effetdisproportionné sur la mortalité des abeilles.

[SDE] Environmental Sciencespollinators
researchProduct

The floral nectaries in theLimnanthaceae

1992

Floral nectaries in theLimnanthaceae are established as exoscopic basal bulges of the episepalous stamens. Their nectariferous tissues include the epidermis and hypodermal parenchyma and inLimnanthes are vascularized by phloematic branches of the staminal bundles. Secretion occurs mainly through anomocytic stomata but, in addition, probably through the outer cuticularized thin walls of the epidermal cells. The flower structure is comparatively simple. The nectar is often slightly concealed. A wide range of pollinators can be expected, but bees are observed to be the dominant ones. The systematic position of the family is still obscure. Taxonomic placement near to any other geranialian famil…

biologyEpidermis (botany)fungiStamenfood and beveragesGeranialesFloerkeaPlant ScienceAnatomybiology.organism_classificationPollinatorParenchymaBotanyUltrastructureNectarEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

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
researchProduct

The perfume flowers ofCyphomandra (Solanaceae): Pollination by euglossine bees, bellows mechanism, osmophores, and volatiles

1993

The perfume syndrome and pollination by fragrance-collecting euglossine bees in the neotropic solanaceous genusCyphomandra was confirmed by field observations. In SE Brazil,C. sciadostylis was visited byEufriesea violaceae, andC. diploconos byEuglossa mandibularis; C. hartwegii was pollinated byEulaema meriana in Costa Rica. The primary attractant, fragrant droplets that ooze from the dorsally bulged connectives, is mopped up by the males with the forebasitarsi. Thereby, the poricidal thecae are inadvertently pushed causing the dry pollen to dust the bee's sternum. The number and direction of the pollen jets are related to pollinator size and stigma structure. The flowers are homogamous, se…

biologyPollinationApidaeStamenPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease_causeApoideaPollinatorPollenBotanymedicineEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCyphomandraEulaema merianaPlant Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

The pollination syndrome ofDeplanchea tetraphylla (Bignoniaceae)

1986

The reproductive structures ofDeplanchea tetraphylla (Bignoniaceae) exhibit a significant number of unusual features: inflorescence with an apical “platform”; flowers yellow, short-tubed, strongly zygomorphic; mouth closed through lateral compression; stamens and style long-exserted, erect or slightly reclined; nectar dark brown, exposed in the spoon-shaped lowermost corolla lobe and apparently acting also as a visual cue. These features suggest a highly elaborate syndrome for bird pollination: the birds (probably lorikeets) perch on the inflorescence platform and bend downwards to take up the exposed nectar, thus touching the exserted anthers and stigmas with the throat or breast. The like…

biologyPollinationDeplancheaDeplanchea tetraphyllafood and beveragesBignoniaceaePlant SciencePollination syndromebiology.organism_classificationInflorescencePollinatorBotanyNectarEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant Systematics and Evolution
researchProduct

Die Ölblumensymbiosen - Parallelismus and andere Aspekte ihrer Entwicklung in Raum and Zeit1, 2

2009

The oil-bee/oil-flower relationships: parallelism and other aspects of their evolution in space and time A survey is given of our present knowledge and existing hypotheses concerning the biogeography, history, and phylogeny of plant taxa yielding fatty oil as a floral reward, and of the bee genera involved in their pollination. Four syngenetic complexes of the symbiosis arose convergently: The neotropical, the paleotropical, the holarctic, and the capensic complex. On the basis of the mutual structural adaptations of bees and flowers it is concluded that, in addition, parallelism within related groups as a result of a common tendency to develop the respective organs, has played an important…

biologyPollinationEcologyBiogeographybiology.organism_classificationApoideaTaxonHolarcticPollinatorPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCoevolutionJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
researchProduct