نتایج جستجو برای: namely pollinator wasps is required emphatically

تعداد نتایج: 7346771  

2011
Stefan Abrahamczyk Jürgen Kluge Yuvinka Gareca Steffen Reichle Michael Kessler

Tropical South America is rich in different groups of pollinators, but the biotic and abiotic factors determining the geographical distribution of their species richness are poorly understood. We analyzed the species richness of three groups of pollinators (bees and wasps, butterflies, hummingbirds) in six tropical forests in the Bolivian lowlands along a gradient of climatic seasonality and pr...

2004
Emmanuelle Jousselin Finn Kjellberg Edward Allen Herre

The stability of the mutualism between figs and their pollinator wasps depends on the patterns of seed and wasp production. In Ficus maxima, a passively pollinated monoecious fig, we estimated the correlations among different flower characteristics and determined their relationships with pollination success and pollinator oviposition. Across flowers, stigma length shows an allometric relationsh...

2014
Yuan Zhang Yan-Qiong Peng Stephen G. Compton Da-Rong Yang

Adult life spans of only one or two days characterise life cycles of the fig wasps (Agaonidae) that pollinate fig trees (Ficus spp., Moraceae). Selection is expected to favour traits that maximise the value of the timing of encounters between such mutualistic partners, and fig wasps are usually only attracted to their hosts by species- and developmental-stage specific volatiles released from fi...

2017
Shazia Raja Nazia Suleman Rupert J. Quinnell Stephen G. Compton

23 Ficus and their species–specific pollinator fig wasps represent an obligate plant-insect 24 mutualism, but figs also support a community of non-pollinating fig wasps (NPFWs) 25 that consist of gall makers and parasitoids/inquilines. We studied interactions between 26 Kradibia tentacularis, the pollinator of a dioecious fig tree species Ficus montana, and 27 an undescribed NPFW Sycoscapter sp...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2008
Derek W Dunn Douglas W Yu Jo Ridley James M Cook

1. Fig trees (Ficus) are pollinated only by agaonid wasps, whose larvae also gall fig ovules. Each ovule develops into either a seed (when pollinated) or a wasp (when an egg is also laid inside) but not both. 2. Ovipositing wasps (foundresses) favour ovules near the centre of the enclosed inflorescence (syconium or 'fig'), leaving ovules near the outer wall to develop into seeds. This spatial s...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2002
Bob B M Wong Florian P Schiestl

Certain orchids produce flowers that mimic the sex pheromones and appearance of female insects in order to attract males by sexual deception for the purpose of pollination. In a series of field experiments, we found that the sexually deceptive orchid, Chiloglottis trapeziformis, can have a negative impact on its wasp pollinator Neozeleboria cryptoides. Male and female wasps, however, were affec...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2001
G D Weiblen D W Yu S A Wes

Fig wasps (Agaonidae: Hymenoptera) are seed predators and their interactions with Ficus species (Moraceae) range from mutualism to parasitism. Recently considerable attention has been paid to conflicts of interest between the mutualists and how they are resolved in monoecious fig species. However, despite the fact that different conflicts can arise, little is known about the factors that influe...

Journal: :American journal of botany 2010
Eduardo Narbona Rodolfo Dirzo

Typically, plant-pollinator interactions are recognized as mutualistic relationships. Flower visitors, however, can potentially play multiple roles. The floral nectar in Croton suberosus has been proposed to operate as a reward for predators, especially the wasp Polistes instabilis (Vespidae), which kills herbivorous insects, while the plant has been thought to be mainly wind-pollinated. In thi...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2005
Nina Rønsted George D Weiblen James M Cook Nicolas Salamin Carlos A Machado Vincent Savolainen

Figs (Ficus; ca 750 species) and fig wasps (Agaoninae) are obligate mutualists: all figs are pollinated by agaonines that feed exclusively on figs. This extraordinary symbiosis is the most extreme example of specialization in a plant-pollinator interaction and has fuelled much speculation about co-divergence. The hypothesis that pollinator specialization led to the parallel diversification of f...

2012
Hui Yu Stephen G. Compton

Figs are the inflorescences of fig trees (Ficus spp., Moraceae). They are shaped like a hollow ball, lined on their inner surface by numerous tiny female flowers. Pollination is carried out by host-specific fig wasps (Agaonidae). Female pollinators enter the figs through a narrow entrance gate and once inside can walk around on a platform generated by the stigmas of the flowers. They lay their ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید