685 results — topic: Flowering & Pollination

Dataset

Flowering phenology in subalpine meadows: Does climate variation influence community co-flowering patterns?

Climate change is expected to alter patterns of species co-occurrence, in both space and time. Species-specific shifts in reproductive phenology may alter the assemblages of plant species in flower at any given time during the growing season. Temporal overlap in the flowering periods (co-flowering)

Forrest, Jessica, Inouye, David W, D. Thomson, James2021DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3301874.v1
Dataset

Appendix C. Relationships between temperature and arrival of Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and flowering onset in its early-season nectar resources at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory in Colorado, USA.

Phenological advancements driven by climate change are especially pronounced at higher latitudes, so that migrants from lower latitudes may increasingly arrive at breeding grounds after the appearance of seasonal resources. To explore this possibility, we compared dates of first arrival of Broad-tai

McKinney, Amy M, CaraDonna, Paul J, Inouye, David W2021DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.3554139.v1
Student Paper

Pollinator-mediate selection in Ipomopsis aggregata: does correlational selection explain floral phenotypes?

The theory of pollination syndromes is pervasive in pollination biology. Correlational selection may explain why certain flower phenotypes are selected for by certain pollinators thereby offering support for the theory of pollinations syndromes. Using potted individuals of the hummingbird-pollinated

Addis C. E.2008
Article

Bridging the generation gap in plants: pollination, parental fecundity, and offspring demography

Despite extensive study of pollination and plant reproduction on the one hand, and of plant demography on the other, we know remarkably little about links between seed production in successive generations, and hence about long-term population consequences of variation in pollination success. We brid

Price M. V., Campbell D. R., Waser N. M.2008EcologyDOI: 10.1890/07-0614.1Cited 72 times
Article

Mechanisms of tolerance to floral larceny in two animal-pollinated wildflowers, <i>Polemonium viscosum</i> and <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>

Irwin R. E., Galen C., Rabenold J. J.2008Ecology
Article

Effects of climate change on phenology, frost damage, and floral abundance of montane wildflowers

The timing of life history traits is central to lifetime fitness and nowhere is this more evident or well studied as in the phenology of flowering in governing plant reproductive success. Recent changes in the timing of environmental events attributable to climate change, such as the date of snowmel

Inouye D. W.2008EcologyDOI: 10.1890/06-2128.1Cited 1104 times
Article

Pollen limitation and cleistogamy in subalpine <i>Viola praemorsa</i>

Early-flowering species may be especially susceptible to occasional pollen limitation and, therefore, may benefit from a mixed-mating strategy that provides reproductive assurance. We studied cleistogamous (CL) and chasmogamous (CH) fruit set of spring-flowering Viola praemorsa Dougl. ex Lindl. alon

Forrest J., Thomson J. D.2008BotanyDOI: 10.1139/b08-020Cited 19 times
Article

Lifetime fitness in two generations of <i>Ipomopsis</i> hybrids

Campbell D. R., Waser N. M., Aldridge G.2008Evolution
Article

Pollinator shifts and the origin and loss of plant species

Campbell D. R.2008Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
Article

Interactions between nectar robbers and seed predators mediated by a shared host plant, <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>

Brody A. K., Irwin R. E., McCutcheon M. L.2008Oecologia
Thesis

Effects of nutrient limitation on floral function and biomass allocation in <i>Geranium richardsonii</i>

Bala J. W.2007
Student Paper

Flower preference and constancy in four butterfly species

Van Wyk J. I.2007
Student Paper

The effects of water and phosphorus on floral traits and nectar production of <i>Ipomopsis aggregata</i>

Floral traits and nectar production of Ipomopsis aggregata were measured in response to water and phosphorus treatments applied to two morphotypes. Typical morphotypes underwent water and phosphorus treatments. Because stunted floral traits may be a response to drought stress, only water treatments

McChesney M.2007
Student Paper

The effect of sampling effort on species richness estimates of flower visitors

Estimates of species richness, while useful and common to many subdisciplines of biology, are problematic in their reliance on adequate sampling effort. How much sampling is required for an accurate estimate of species richness, and what levels of sampling will render communities comparable? This st

Kowal V. A.2007
Article

Leaf physiology reflects environmental differences and cytoplasmic background in <i>Ipomopsis</i> hybrids

Natural hybridization can produce individuals that vary widely in fitness, depending upon the performance of particular genotypes in a given environment. In a hybrid zone with habitat heterogeneity, differences in physiological responses to abiotic conditions could influence the fitness and spatial

Wu C. A., Campbell D. R.2007American Journal of BotanyDOI: 10.3732/ajb.94.11.1804Cited 25 times
Article

Constrained lability in floral evolution: counting convergent origins of hummingbird pollination in <i>Keckiella</i> and <i>Penstemon</i>

In the clade of Penstemon and segregate genera, pollination syndromes are well defined among the 284 species. Most display combinations of floral characters associated with pollination by Hymenoptera, the ancestral mode of pollination for this clade. Forty-one species present characters associated w

Wilson P., Wolfe A. D., Armbruster W. S.2007New PhytologistDOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2007.02219.xCited 132 times
Article

Effects of floral display size and biparental inbreeding on outcrossing rates in <i></i>Delphinium Barbeyi<i></i> (Ranunculaceae)

Williams C. F.2007American Journal of Botany
Article

Behavior of inexperienced bumble bees toward spatial clumping of nectar

Taneyhill D., Thomson J. D.2007Entomologia Generalis
Article

Reproductive and physiological responses to simulated climate warming for four subalpine species

Lambrecht S. C., Loik M. E., Inouye D. W.2007New Phytologist
Article

Evolutionary dynamics of an <i>Ipomopsis</i> hybrid zone: confronting models with lifetime fitness data

Interspecific hybridization is a recurring aspect of the evolution of many plant and animal groups. The temporal dynamics of hybrid zones and the evolutionary consequences of hybridization should depend on fitness of parental and hybrid individuals expressed in different environments. We measured li

Campbell D. R., Waser N. M.2007American NaturalistDOI: 10.2307/4137022Cited 24 times