619 results — topic: Flowering & Pollination

Article

The ecology of avian incubation

Journal Article The Ecology of Avian Incubation Get access Cynthia Carey Cynthia Carey Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar BioScience, Volume 30, Issue 12, December 1980, Pages 819–824, https://doi.org/10.2307/1308374 Published: 01 December 1980 Article history A

1980BioScienceDOI: 10.2307/1308374Cited 73 times
Article

Wild hummingbirds discriminate nonspectral colors

Many animals have the potential to discriminate nonspectral colors. For humans, purple is the clearest example of a nonspectral color. It is perceived when two color cone types in the retina (blue and red) with nonadjacent spectral sensitivity curves are predominantly stimulated. Purple is considere

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesDOI: 10.1073/pnas.1919377117Cited 72 times
Article

Norditerpene alkaloid concentrations in tissues and floral rewards of larkspurs and impacts on pollinators

It is suggested that nectar with low alkaloid concentrations may be beneficial to plant fitness by limiting adverse effects on pollinator activity and optimal defense theory.

2013Biochemical Systematics and EcologyDOI: 10.1016/j.bse.2012.11.015Cited 72 times
Article

Variation in pollinator preference between two <i>Ipomopsis</i> contact sites that differ in hybridization rate

Pollinator-mediated reproductive isolation is often a principal factor in determining the rate of hybridization between plant species. Pollinator preference and constancy can reduce interspecific pollen transfer between otherwise interfertile, coflowering species. The importance of this ethological

2007EvolutionDOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00008.xCited 72 times
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

2008EcologyDOI: 10.1890/07-0614.1Cited 72 times
Article

Integrating behavioral, population and large-scale approaches for understanding stream insect communities

It is argued that as an alternative to analyzing the species composition of whole insect communities, focusing on variation in the composition of behavioral trait groups is likely to provide increased understanding of how stream insect communities are assembled, thereby linking behavioral, populatio

2014Current Opinion in Insect ScienceDOI: 10.1016/j.cois.2014.06.002Cited 72 times
Article

Fecal glucocorticoid metabolites in wild yellow-bellied marmots: experimental validation, individual differences and ecological correlates

This study performs biological and physiological validations of a minimally-invasive technique for assessing fecal corticosterone metabolites in captive and wild groups of yellow-bellied marmots and finds repeatable inter-individual differences in FCMs, suggesting this hormonal trait might be a mean

2012General and Comparative EndocrinologyDOI: 10.1016/j.ygcen.2012.06.015Cited 72 times
Article

Thermoregulation and the determinants of heat transfer in Colias butterflies

The success of the butterfly simulator in mimicking Colias thermal characteristics confirms the preliminary understanding of the physical bases for and heat transfer mechanisms underlying thermoregulatory adaptations in these butterflies.

1982OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00377132Cited 71 times
Article

The food habits of stoneflies (Plecoptera) in the upper Gunnison River, Colorado

Gut contents of 1,463 stonefly nymphs, comprising 10 species, from the Gunnison River, Colorado, were analyzed from Dec., 1974–Oct., 1975, in relation to food availability. Pteronarcella badia fed primarily on detritus and moss. Perlidae and Perlodidae mature nymphs were all carnivorous, but showed

1977Environmental EntomologyDOI: 10.1093/ee/6.2.293Cited 71 times
Article

Oviposition behavior and offspring performance in herbivorous insects: consequences of climatic and habitat heterogeneity

The preference–performance hypothesis predicts that when female herbivorous insects determine where to position offspring of low mobility, they will select sites that maximize development and survival of those offspring. How this critical relationship responds to variation in climatic and habitat co

2010OikosDOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2009.17759.xCited 71 times
Article

Small spaces, big impacts: contributions of micro-environmental variation to population persistence under climate change

Individuals within natural populations can experience very different abiotic and biotic conditions across small spatial scales owing to microtopography and other micro-environmental gradients. Ecological and evolutionary studies often ignore the effects of micro-environment on plant population and c

2020AOB PlantsDOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plaa005Cited 71 times
Article

Spatial genetic heterogeneity in a population of the montane perennial plant Delphinium nelsonii

Apparent random spatial heterogeneity is expected if gene flow is extensive enough to prevent a rapid decline in genetic correlation with distance; it also might be promoted by a leapfrog pattern of gene flow.

1987HeredityDOI: 10.1038/hdy.1987.39Cited 71 times
Article

Early play may predict later dominance relationships in yellow-bellied marmots (<i>Marmota flaviventris</i>)

Play has been defined as apparently functionless behaviour, yet since play is costly, models of adaptive evolution predict that it should have some beneficial function (or functions) that outweigh its costs. We provide strong evidence for a long-standing, but poorly supported hypothesis: that early

2013Proceedings of the Royal Society BDOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.0485Cited 70 times
Article

Responses of pikas (Ochotona princeps, Lagomorpha) to naturally occurring terrestrial predators

Weasels were determined to be more effective predators of pikas than martens, and these asymmetries in behavior and alarm vocalizations may indicate that responses reduce an individual's risk of predaton by weasels.

1983Behavioral EcologyDOI: 10.1007/bf00299675Cited 70 times
Article

Morphological variation of Daphnia pulex Leydig (Crustacea: Cladocera) and related species from North America

The data support either the view that the D. pulex species group is one widespread and variable species, or that it is comprised of a much larger number of species than presently recognized.

1981HydrobiologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf02187155Cited 70 times
Article

A brief review of the geology of the San Juan region of southwestern Colorado

Pre-Potosi volcanic rocks

1935DOI: 10.3133/b843Cited 70 times
Article

The size composition of invertebrate drift in a Rocky Mountain stream

Drift collections from a Rocky Mountain stream were used to examine the hypothesis that, because risk of predation by fish is greatest for large individuals during the day, aquatic insects should become increasingly nocturnal in their drift periodicity as they grow in size. Seven taxa common in the

1984OikosDOI: 10.2307/3544247Cited 69 times
Book

The Colorado formation and its invertebrate fauna

From preface: The following review of one of the Upper Cretaceous faunas as developed in the interior region of the United States has grown out of the study of a collection of fossils found by me in Huerfano park and adjacent localities in southern Colorado. This collection, the greater part of whic

1893Govt. Print. Off. eBooksDOI: 10.5962/bhl.title.52405Cited 69 times
Article

Pollinators increase the cost of sex by avoiding female flowers

1987EcologyDOI: 10.2307/1939276Cited 69 times
Article

Spatial relationships and social organization in adult pikas: a facultatively monogamous mammal

Abstract and SummaryAdult spatial relationships and social organization in a marked population of alpine mammals, the pika (Ochotona princeps), were studied over a 3‐year period in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Home range size, distances between centers of activity of dyads, and weighted overlaps

1984Zeitschrift fr TierpsychologieDOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0310.1984.tb01370.xCited 69 times