Pollination syndrome

Results: 170



#Item
11Botany / Pollen / Flower / Pollinator / Bee / Electron microscope / Microscope / Optical microscope / Pollination syndrome / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Biology

Have you ever looked closely at a flower and seen some powdery-looking stuff on it? If you touch it, it brushes off easily onto your finger. Those tiny grains of powder are pollen grains. It’s what flowering plants use

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Source URL: www.ala.org.au

Language: English - Date: 2011-09-19 00:52:43
12Insect ecology / Symbiosis / Beekeeping / Pollination syndrome / Bee / Flower / Bumble bee / Penstemon / Megachilidae / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Pollinators

OIKOS 104: 345–361, 2004 A multivariate search for pollination syndromes among penstemons Paul Wilson, Maria Clara Castellanos, James N. Hogue, James D. Thomson and W. Scott Armbruster Wilson, P., Castellanos, M. C.,

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2003-12-09 12:45:38
13Pollinators / Beekeeping / Symbiosis / Plant morphology / Penstemon / Bee / Pollination syndrome / Mason bee / Bumble bee / Plant reproduction / Biology / Pollination

The Insects That Visit Penstemon Flowers Sarah Kimball Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZPaul Wilson

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2009-04-17 12:20:34
14Botany / Nectar / Pollination syndrome / Penstemon / Pollinator / Ornithophily / Flower / Forage / Heliconia / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Biology

American Journal of Botany 89(1): 111–DYNAMIC NECTAR REPLENISHMENT IN FLOWERS PENSTEMON (SCROPHULARIACEAE)1 MARIA CLARA CASTELLANOS,2,4,5 PAUL WILSON,3 JAMES D. THOMSON2,4

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2003-02-12 14:32:04
15Botany / Pollination syndrome / Pollinator / Flower / Bee / Ornithophily / Bumble bee / Nectar / Hummingbird / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Biology

doi: j00729.x ‘Anti-bee’ and ‘pro-bird’ changes during the evolution of hummingbird pollination in Penstemon flowers M. C. CASTELLANOS,*  P. WILSONà & J. D. THOMSON*  *Department of Zo

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2004-07-05 15:00:26
16Biology / Pollination syndrome / Pollinator / Ornithophily / Flower / Bee / Orchidaceae / Disa / Angraecum / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Botany

Striking example of avatars evolving together among local communities

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2009-03-30 12:32:36
17Botany / Pollination syndrome / Pollinator / Flower / Bumble bee / Bee / Pollen / Ornithophily / Hummingbird / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Biology

Essay Birds, Bees Paul Wilson and Maria Clara Castellanos* We are sitting in an alpine meadow on the saddle between Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl, the legendary volcanoes that rise up as gods from the Valley of

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Source URL: www.csun.edu

Language: English - Date: 2005-10-18 17:27:46
18Pollination / Plant morphology / Insect ecology / Symbiosis / Plant sexuality / Nutmeg / Pollinator / Myristicaceae / Pollination syndrome / Plant reproduction / Botany / Biology

Mongabay.com Open Access Journal - Tropical Conservation Science – Special Issue Vol.6 (5):, 2013 Review Article Pollination of Myristica and other nutmegs in natural populations

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Source URL: tropicalconservationscience.mongabay.com

Language: English - Date: 2013-11-03 17:54:30
19Pollination / Pollinators / Beekeeping / Plant morphology / Bees / Flower / Bee / Honey bee / Pollination syndrome / Plant reproduction / Biology / Botany

Classroom Activity 10 Big Question: How can we feed the world sustainably? Experiment: Nectar Production Overview Nectar is a renewable resource. Plants utilise nectar production strategies that maximise

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Source URL: www.sciences.adelaide.edu.au

Language: English - Date: 2013-03-14 02:38:04
20Botany / Pollen / Flower / Pollinator / Bee / Electron microscope / Microscope / Optical microscope / Pollination syndrome / Plant reproduction / Pollination / Biology

Have you ever looked closely at a flower and seen some powdery-looking stuff on it? If you touch it, it brushes off easily onto your finger. Those tiny grains of powder are pollen grains. It’s what flowering plants use

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.ala.org.au

Language: English - Date: 2011-09-19 00:52:43
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