نتایج جستجو برای: nectaries

تعداد نتایج: 328  

Journal: :The Plant cell 2005
Ji-Young Lee Stuart F Baum John Alvarez Amita Patel Daniel H Chitwood John L Bowman

CRABS CLAW (CRC), a member of the YABBY gene family, is required for nectary and carpel development. To further understand CRC regulation in Arabidopsis thaliana, we performed phylogenetic footprinting analyses of 5' upstream regions of CRC orthologs from three Brassicaceae species, including Arabidopsis. Phylogenetic footprinting efficiently identified functionally important regulatory regions...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2010
Carlos M Herrera María I Pozo

Yeasts are ubiquitous in terrestrial and aquatic microbiota, yet their ecological functionality remains relatively unexplored in comparison with other micro-organisms. This paper formulates and tests the novel hypothesis that heat produced by the sugar catabolism of yeast populations inhabiting floral nectar can increase the temperature of floral nectar and, more generally, modify the within-fl...

2017
Priscila Andre Sanz-Veiga Leonardo Ré Jorge Santiago Benitez-Vieyra Felipe W Amorim

Extrafloral nectaries can occur in both vegetative and reproductive plant structures. In many Rubiaceae species in the Brazilian Cerrado, after corolla abscission, the floral nectary continues to secret nectar throughout fruit development originating post-floral pericarpial nectaries which commonly attract many ant species. The occurrence of such nectar secreting structures might be strategic f...

2017
Denise Lange Eduardo Soares Calixto Kleber Del-Claro

Extrafloral nectar is the main food source offered by plants to predatory ants in most land environments. Although many studies have demonstrated the importance of extrafloral nectaries (EFNs) to plant defense against herbivores, the influence of EFNs secretory activity pattern on predatory ants remains yet not fully understood. Here, we verified the relation between the extrafloral nectar prod...

Journal: :Brazilian journal of biology = Revista brasleira de biologia 2003
A M Almeida R A Figueiredo

Epidendrum denticulatum (Orchidaceae) produces nectar on the petioles of buds, flowers, and fruits (extrafloral nectaries) but no nectar is found on its flowers, and it is probably a deceptive species. In the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest, some aspects of both the ecology and behavior of Camponotus sericeiventris (Formicinae) and Ectatomma tuberculatum (Ponerinae), two ant species foraging on E...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2013
Nina Hobbhahn Steven D Johnson Benny Bytebier Edward C Yeung Lawrence D Harder

BACKGROUND AND AIMS The Orchidaceae have a history of recurring convergent evolution in floral function as nectar production has evolved repeatedly from an ancestral nectarless state. However, orchids exhibit considerable diversity in nectary type, position and morphology, indicating that this convergence arose from alternative adaptive solutions. Using the genus Disa, this study asks whether r...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2013
Marjorie G Weber Kathleen H Keeler

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Understanding the evolutionary patterns of ecologically relevant traits is a central goal in plant biology. However, for most important traits, we lack the comprehensive understanding of their taxonomic distribution needed to evaluate their evolutionary mode and tempo across the tree of life. Here we evaluate the broad phylogenetic patterns of a common plant-defence trait fo...

2015
In-Young Choi Chan-Ho Kang Geon-Hwi Lee Ji-Hyun Park Hyeon-Dong Shin

In September 2013, we discovered sooty mould growing on kenaf with the extrafloral nectaries in Iksan, Korea and identified the causative fungus as Leptoxyphium kurandae based on morphological characteristics and phylogenetic analyses. This is the first report of sooty mould caused by L. kurandae on kenaf in Korea and globally.

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