685 results — topic: Flowering & Pollination
Data from: Sex-specific responses to climate change in plants alter population sex ratio and performance
Males and females are ecologically distinct in many species, but whether responses to climate change are sex-specific is unknown. We document sex-specific responses to climate change in the plant Valeriana edulis (valerian) over four decades and across its 1800m elevation range. Increased elevation
Data from: Facilitated exploitation of pollination mutualisms: fitness consequences for plants
Mutualisms are only rarely one-to-one interactions: each species generally interacts with multiple mutualists. Exploitation is ubiquitous in mutualisms, and we would therefore expect that each mutualist interacts with multiple exploiters as well. Exploiter species may also interact with one another.
Comparing pollen dispersal and gene flow in a natural plant population
Estimates of realized gene flow and pollen dispersal to stigmas in the same natural populations of Ipomopsis aggregata subsp.
A profile of persistence: territorial hummingbirds
Seed dispersal in four Rocky Mountain herbaceous perennials: wind dispersal in <i>Erythronium grandiflorum</i> and ant dispersal in <i>Corydalis aurea</i>, <i>Delphinium nelsonii</i>, <i>Viola nuttalli</i>
Pollination efficiency and effectiveness of bumblebees and hummingbirds visiting Delphinium nelsonii
Nectar standing crops in Delphinium nelsonii flowers: spatial autocorrelation among plants?
Several aspects of nectarivore foraging behavior have been interpreted as responses to spatial reward patchiness of the kind documented for Delphinium nelsonii floral nectar by Pleasants and Zimmerman (1979). Working with this same species over 3 yr, however, we were unable to detect substantial pat
The effect of inflorescence size on pollinator visitation of Delphinium nelsonii and Aconitum columbianum
Variation in pollen size, fertilization ability and postfertilization siring ability in Erythronium grandiflorum
Pollen-pollen and pollen-style interactions during pollen tube growth in Erythronium grandiflorum (Liliaceae)
Using pairs of pollen donors, I analyzed the growth of pollen tubes growing in different channels of the same style in Erythronium grandiflorum. After 24 hr the length of pollen tubes of randomly selected pollen donors was affected by the presence of other donors. The mean pollen tube lengths of don
The hummingbird's restraint: a natural model for weight control
In July, cessation of territorial activity was accompanied by a regular upward drift of dawn weight, suggesting that weight had been regulated previously as a balance between expenditure and intake, perhaps without involving set-points.
Physiology of Cold Adaptation in Birds
Optimal outcrossing in Ipomopsis aggregata: seed set and offspring fitness
Restricted gene flow and localized selection should establish a correlation between physical proximity and genetic similarity in many plant populations. Given this situation, fitness may decline in crosses between nearby plants (inbreeding depression), and in crosses between more widely separated pl
Dispersal of Erythronium grandiflorum pollen by bumblebees: implications for gene flow and reproductive success
Germination schedules of pollen grains: implications for pollen selection
EvolutionVolume 43, Issue 1 p. 220-223 Note and CommentFree Access GERMINATION SCHEDULES OF POLLEN GRAINS: IMPLICATIONS FOR POLLEN SELECTION James D. Thomson, James D. Thomson Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, 11794 Rocky Mountain Biol
Deployment of ovules and pollen among flowers with inflorescences
Evolutionary options for maximizing pollen dispersal of animal-pollinated plants
On the average, nectar-collecting bumble bees deposited 0.6% of the pollen removed from the flowers of Erythronium grandiflorum (Liliaceae) onto the stigmas of subsequently visited flowers. Because the proportion deposited declined as the amount removed increased, an individual plant would maximize
Evolutionary options for maximizing pollen dispersal of animal-pollinated plants.
On the average, nectar-collecting bumble bees deposited 0.6% of the pollen removed from the flowers of Erythronium grandiflorum (Liliaceae) onto the stigmas of subsequently visited flowers. Because the proportion deposited declined as the amount removed increased, an individual plant would maximize
Floral color change in <i>Lupinus Argenteus</i> (Fabaceae): Why should plants advertise the location of unrewarding flowers to pollinators?
I examined the adaptive significance of two floral traits in the perennial herb, Lupinus argenteus: 1) the retention of corollas on "spent" flowers, i.e., flowers containing inviable pollen, unreceptive stigmas, and negligible pollinator rewards and 2) a change in corolla color of retained "spent" f
Pollen tube attrition in Erythronium grandiflorum
Seed set after selfing in E. grandiflorum is often reduced relative to seed set after crossing; however, the compatibility patterns seen are not due to genes of major effect (i.e., S alleles). There is quantitative variation in the proportion of pollen tubes reaching the base of the style after both
