نتایج جستجو برای: namely pollinator wasps is required emphatically.

تعداد نتایج: 7346771  

Journal: :دانش گیاه پزشکی ایران 0
مرتضی راسخ دانشجوی سابق ارشد دانشگاه فردوسی مشهد حسین صادقی دانشیار فردوسی مشهد مجتبی حسینی استادیار فردوسی مشهد

the diversity and abundance of bees associated with alfalfa and onion fields in mashhad and chenaran were evaluated from mid june until late october 2010. considering the type and flowering period of the studied crops, by using a standard sweeping net, either a weekly or biweekly sampling program of apoid bees were carried out in selected fields for both crops. as a result, 17 species of 15 gen...

Journal: :PLoS Biology 2008
Derek W Dunn Simon T Segar Jo Ridley Ruth Chan Ross H Crozier Douglas W Yu James M Cook

Mutualisms are interspecific interactions in which both players benefit. Explaining their maintenance is problematic, because cheaters should outcompete cooperative conspecifics, leading to mutualism instability. Monoecious figs (Ficus) are pollinated by host-specific wasps (Agaonidae), whose larvae gall ovules in their "fruits" (syconia). Female pollinating wasps oviposit directly into Ficus o...

2015
Rong Wang Stephen G Compton Rupert J Quinnell Yan-Qiong Peng Louise Barwell Yan Chen

Many plants are grown outside their natural ranges. Plantings adjacent to native ranges provide an opportunity to monitor community assembly among associated insects and their parasitoids in novel environments, to determine whether gradients in species richness emerge and to examine their consequences for host plant reproductive success. We recorded the fig wasps (Chalcidoidea) associated with ...

Journal: :Dong wu xue yan jiu = Zoological research 2012
Zhen-Ji Wang Guo-Chang Li Yan-Qiong Peng Da-Rong Yang

In addition to pollinator fig wasps, there are several non-pollinating fig wasps associated with monoecious Ficus sp. In order to understand how pollinator fig wasps and non-pollinating fig wasps are distributed across the same syconium, the spatial distribution of fig wasps associated with Ficus altissima and F. benjamina were compared using the pedicle lengths of galls containing each species...

2014
Ting-Ting Zhao Stephen G. Compton Yong-Jiang Yang Rong Wang Yan Chen

Flowering phenology is central to the ecology and evolution of most flowering plants. In highly-specific nursery pollination systems, such as that involving fig trees (Ficus species) and fig wasps (Agaonidae), any mismatch in timing has serious consequences because the plants must balance seed production with maintenance of their pollinator populations. Most fig trees are found in tropical or s...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2014
Lakshminath Kundanati Namrata Gundiah

Female insects of diverse orders bore into substrates to deposit their eggs. Such insects must overcome several biomechanical challenges to successfully oviposit, which include the selection of suitable substrates through which the ovipositor can penetrate without itself fracturing. In many cases, the insect may also need to steer and manipulate the ovipositor within the substrate to deliver eg...

2007
Hui Yu Nanxian Zhao Yizhu Chen Edward Allen Herre

We studied components of male and female reproductive success in the fig, Ficus hirta from Guangdong Province, China. Specifically, we analyzed the composition and sex ratio of both pollinating (Blastophaga javana) and the two species of non-pollinating wasps associated with functionally male figs, as well as seed production in the functionally female figs. In male figs, a mean of 799 flowers p...

Journal: :Parasitology 2010
Y Q Peng J B Zhao R D Harrison D R Yang

Figs and their pollinating wasps are a classic example of an obligate mutualism. In addition, figs are parasitized by a suite of non-mutualistic wasps whose basic ecology is largely undescribed. Sycophilomorpha (subfamily Epichrysomallinae) fig wasps are ovule gallers and the genus contains only 1 described species. An undescribed Sycophilomorpha species parasitized Ficus altissima at Xishuangb...

2017
Allysa C. Hallett Randall J. Mitchell Evan R. Chamberlain Jeffrey D. Karron

Pollinator abundance is declining worldwide and may lower the quantity and quality of pollination services to flowering plant populations. Loss of an important pollinator is often assumed to reduce the amount of pollen received by stigmas of a focal species (pollination success), yet this assumption has rarely been tested experimentally. The magnitude of the effect, if any, may depend on the re...

Journal: :Biology letters 2012
Nazia Suleman Shazia Raja Stephen G Compton

Male insects rarely collaborate with each other, but pollinator fig wasps (Hymenoptera: Agaonidae) are said to be an exception. Immature fig wasps feed on galled ovules located inside figs, the inflorescences of Ficus species (Moraceae). After mating, adult pollinator males chew communal exit-holes that allow mated females (which are often also their siblings) to escape. Figs also support non-p...

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