389 results — topic: Recreation & Tourism
Article
Context-dependent reproductive isolation mediated by floral scent and color
Article
Male bumble bees are important pollinators of a late-blooming plant
Article
Improving our chemistry: Challenges and opportunities in the interdisciplinary study of floral volatiles
Article
Gender inequality in predispersal seed predation contributes to female seed set advantage in a gynodioecious species
Student Paper
Geographic variation in flowering phenology in Boechera stricta: testing for adaptive response to climate across the species range
Article
Genes Suggest Ancestral Colour Polymorphisms Are Shared across Morphologically Cryptic Species in Arctic Bumblebees
Article
Using the literature to test pollination syndromes - some methodological cautions
Article
Plasticity in functional traits in the context of climate change: A case study of the subalpine forb Boechera stricta (Brassicaceae)
Thesis
The evolutionary ecology of ultraviolet floral pigmentation
Article
Selection of trait combinations through bee and fly visitation to flowers of <i>Polemonium foliosissimum</i>
Article
Nectar Yeasts in the Tall Larkspur <i>Delphinium barbeyi</i> (Ranunculaceae) and Effects on Components of Pollinator Foraging Behavior
Thesis
Roles of pollinators, seed predators, and vertebrate herbivores in maintaining females in the gynodioecious <i>Polemonium foliosissimum</i>.
Article
Floral scent in natural hybrids of <i>Ipomopsis</i> (Polemoniaceae) and their two parental species
Article
Secondary compounds in floral rewards of toxic rangeland plants: impacts on pollinators
Article
Yeasts in nectar enhance male fitness in a montane perennial herb
Student Paper
Correlating road dust with reproduction of Ipomopsis aggregate.
Student Paper
The Impact of Primary and Secondary Robbing on Hummingbird Pollination.
Article
Stimulation of flower nectar replenishment by removal: a survey of eleven animal-pollinated plant species
Student Paper
Effects of water availability on the relationship between seed set and pollen received in Ipomopsis aggregate.
Student Paper
