100 results — topic: Mining & Mineral Resources

Article

An examination of synchrony between insect emergence and flowering in Rocky Mountain meadows

One possible effect of climate change is the generation of a mismatch in the seasonal timing of interacting organisms, owing to species-specific shifts in phenology. Despite concerns that plants and pollinators might be at risk of such decoupling, there have been few attempts to test this hypothesis

2011Ecological MonographsDOI: 10.1890/10-1885.1Cited 277 times
Article

Heterogeneity among floral visitors leads to discordance between removal and deposition of pollen

Flowers are often visited by many species of animals.
\nThese sometimes differ in size, behavior, and other
\ncharacteristics that translate into differences in their effectiveness as pollinators. The differences
\nmay be manifest in their effect on reproductive
\nsuccess either thro

1991EcologyDOI: 10.2307/1941124Cited 276 times
Article

Predator-prey interactions between stoneflies and mayflies: behavioral observations

Field experiments were conducted at two streams to determine the mechanisms by which mayfly prey detect and avoid stonefly predators, and to quantify the effect of stonefly predators upon mayfly behavior, distribution, and activity levels. Direct observations of the interactions between stoneflies a

1980EcologyDOI: 10.2307/1936762Cited 275 times
Article

Why red flowers are not invisible to bees

A pervasive idea among pollination biologists is that bees cannot see red flowers. This idea has led many workers to assume that red coloration is an adaptation by which flowers exclude bees as visitors. However, recent empirical and theoretical evidence strongly supports the alternative view, that

1997Israel Journal of Plant SciencesDOI: 10.1080/07929978.1997.10676682Cited 274 times
Article

Ecology and evolution of plant-pollinator interactions

In this Viewpoint paper we highlight the application of ecological and evolutionary approaches to two themes in pollination biology: (1) links between pollinator behaviour and plant mating systems, and (2) generalization and specialization in pollination systems. We also describe how mathematical mo

2009Annals of BotanyDOI: 10.1093/aob/mcp122Cited 267 times
Article

Coevolution of pierid butterflies and their cruciferous foodplants. II. The distribution of eggs on potential foodplants

The extreme specificity

1977EvolutionDOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1977.tb01045.xCited 265 times
Article

The effect of adult food limitation on life history traits in Speyeria mormonia (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae)

Variation in food availability is likely to occur in the wild, and may affect resource allocation to various life history traits. Quantitative adult diet restriction had no effect on life—span or mean individual egg mass, but reduced fecundity in the butterfly Speyeria mormonia. The sum of fecundity

1993EcologyDOI: 10.2307/1939305Cited 265 times
Article

Effective mutualism between sequentially flowering plant species

Evidence is presented that effective mutualism occurs between two species which also compete for pollination and which act as mutualistic partners at the same time that their sequential flowering is maintained by competition.

1979NatureDOI: 10.1038/281670a0Cited 260 times
Article

A general model of the role of male-donated nutrients in female insects' reproduction

Male insects of many species donate nutrients to their females at mating, and the females can use these nutrients for egg production and somatic maintenance. These male-derived nutrients represent male investment in reproduction. The relative investment by each sex in reproduction has been postulate

1990American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/285118Cited 253 times
Article

The energetic and carbon economic origins of leaf thermoregulation

The theory, parameterized with global averaged leaf traits and microclimate, predicts a moderate level of leaf thermoregulation across a broad air temperature gradient, and predicts that net carbon assimilation can be maximized by means of a trade-off between leaf thermal stability and photosyntheti

2016Nature PlantsDOI: 10.1038/nplants.2016.129Cited 253 times
Article

The matrix matters: effective isolation in fragmented landscapes

Traditional approaches to the study of fragmented landscapes invoke an island‐ocean model and assume that the nonhabitat matrix surrounding remnant patches is uniform. Patch isolation, a crucial parameter to the predictions of island biogeography and metapopulation theories, is measured by distance

2001American NaturalistDOI: 10.2307/3078900Cited 253 times
Article

Maximum information entropy: a foundation for ecological theory

It is shown how MaxEnt can accurately predict patterns such as species-area relationships (SARs) and abundance distributions in macroecology and be a foundation for ecological theory.

2014Trends in Ecology and EvolutionDOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2014.04.009Cited 252 times
Article

Non-visual communication in freshwater benthos: an overview

This overview of non-visual communication in freshwater benthic animals emphasizes recent studies of the effect of chemical and mechanical signals on predator-prey interactions of benthic macroinvertebrates and amphibians. Prey species use chemical signals to modify their morphological development,

1994Journal of the North American Benthological SocietyDOI: 10.2307/1467245Cited 251 times
Article

'Anti-bee' and 'pro-bird' changes during the evolution of hummingbird pollination in Penstemon flowers

Abstract Floral phenotypes may be as much the result of selection for avoidance of some animal visitors as selection for improving the interaction with better pollinators. When specializing on hummingbird-pollination, Penstemon flowers may have evolved to improve the morphological fit between bird a

2004Journal of Evolutionary BiologyDOI: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2004.00729.xCited 251 times
Article

Does sociality drive the evolution of communicative complexity? A comparative test with ground-dwelling sciurid alarm calls

While sociality has been hypothesized to drive the evolution of communicative complexity, the relationship remains to be formally tested. We derive a continuous measure of social complexity from demographic data and use this variable to explain variation in alarm repertoire size in ground-dwelling s

1997American NaturalistDOI: 10.1086/286062Cited 246 times
Article

On theory in ecology

We argue for expanding the role of theory in ecology to accelerate scientific progress, enhance the ability to address environmental challenges, foster the development of synthesis and unification, and improve the design of experiments and large-scale environmental-monitoring programs. To achieve th

2014BioScienceDOI: 10.1093/biosci/biu098Cited 246 times
Article

Hypothesis concerning the causes of the disappearance of boreal toads from the mountains of Colorado

Recent reports of world‐wide declines and extinctions of amphibian populations have raised questions about the relation of environmental change to the demise of certain amphibian species. Between 1974 and 1982, 11 populations of boreal toads ( Bufo boreas boreas ) in the West Elk Mountains of Colora

1993Conservation BiologyDOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1739.1993.07020355.xCited 245 times
Article

Size-specific interaction patterns and size matching in a plant-pollinator interaction web

The results suggest that in addition to size thresholds and species abundances, size distributions are important for understanding interaction patterns in plant-pollinator webs. It is likely that the understanding will be improved further by characterizing for entire communities how nectar productio

2009Annals of BotanyDOI: 10.1093/aob/mcp027Cited 243 times
Article

Optimal foraging in bumblebees and coevolution with their plants

The pattern of movements of the bumblebees and the various properties of the plants appear to represent coevolved adaptations and the bumbles' movement patterns appear to be optimal in the sense that they result in the maximum net rate of energy gain to the bumbling.

1978OecologiaDOI: 10.1007/bf00348054Cited 241 times
Article

Optimal foraging in hummingbirds: testing the marginal value theorem

To a hummingbird, clusters of flowers on inflorescences represent patches and provide an ideal situation to test prediction of optimal patch-use. The basic question is what decision rule should a hummingbird use to decide whether or not to leave an inflorescence? The hypothesis is that hummingbirds

1978American ZoologistDOI: 10.1093/icb/18.4.739Cited 239 times