نتایج جستجو برای: pollen and nectar resources

تعداد نتایج: 16848597  

Journal: :caspian journal of environmental sciences 2008
h. sadeghi

encouraging natural enemies by growing attractive plants is considered an effective method of pest control in organic farming. however, it is important to identify which flowers best attract beneficial insects. in this study, relative attractiveness of 16 species of flowering plants to adult hoverflies was assessed by conducting timed observations of feeding-visit frequencies. the experiments w...

2016
ROBERT E. FOWLER ELLEN L. ROTHERAY DAVE GOULSON

1. Pollinator declines caused by forage habitat loss threaten insect pollination services. Pollinating insects depend on adequate floral resources, and their ability to track these resources. Variability of these resources and the effect on insect foraging choice is poorly understood. 2. We record patterns of visitation to six wildflower species and test the hypotheses that: pollinators prefere...

2017
Paige M. Arnold Helen J. Michaels

PREMISE OF THE STUDY Understanding floral resources is vital for restoring pollinators in habitats affected by anthropogenic development and climate change. As the primary adult food, nectar can limit butterfly longevity and reproduction. For pollinator restoration, it would therefore be useful to examine nectar resources. However, because many flowers preferred by butterflies are too small for...

2011
Susan W. Nicolson

Bees are herbivorous insects, consuming nectar and pollen throughout their life cycles. This paper is a brief review of the chemistry of these two floral resources and the implications for bee nutrition. Nectar is primarily an energy source, but in addition to sugars contains various minor constituents that may, directly or indirectly, have nutritional significance. Pollen provides bees with th...

2016
Damien M. Hicks Pierre Ouvrard Katherine C. R. Baldock Mathilde Baude Mark A. Goddard William E. Kunin Nadine Mitschunas Jane Memmott Helen Morse Maria Nikolitsi Lynne M. Osgathorpe Simon G. Potts Kirsty M. Robertson Anna V. Scott Frazer Sinclair Duncan B. Westbury Graham N. Stone

Planted meadows are increasingly used to improve the biodiversity and aesthetic amenity value of urban areas. Although many 'pollinator-friendly' seed mixes are available, the floral resources these provide to flower-visiting insects, and how these change through time, are largely unknown. Such data are necessary to compare the resources provided by alternative meadow seed mixes to each other a...

2017
Fabian Nürnberger Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter Stephan Härtel

The instructive component of waggle dance communication has been shown to increase resource uptake of Apis mellifera colonies in highly heterogeneous resource environments, but an assessment of its relevance in temperate landscapes with different levels of resource heterogeneity is currently lacking. We hypothesized that the advertisement of resource locations via dance communication would be m...

2018
Klaus Lunau Lina An Miriam Donda Michele Hohmann Leonie Sermon Vanessa Stegmanns

Flower visiting Eristalis hoverflies feed on nectar and pollen and are known to rely on innate colour preferences. In addition to a preference for visiting yellow flowers, the flies possess an innate proboscis reflex elicited by chemical as well as yellow colour stimuli. In this study we show that the flies' proboscis reflex is only triggered by yellow colour stimuli and not altered by conditio...

2016
Adam R. Smith Peter Graystock William O.H. Hughes

Foraging specialization allows social insects to more efficiently exploit resources in their environment. Recent research on honeybees suggests that specialization on pollen or nectar among foragers is linked to reproductive physiology and sensory tuning (the Reproductive Ground-Plan Hypothesis; RGPH). However, our understanding of the underlying physiological relationships in non-Apis bees is ...

2010
M P KLEINERT Kleber Del Claro

We describe the environment effects on the amount and quality of resources collected by Melipona rufi ventris Lepeletier in the Atlantic Forest at Ubatuba city, São Paulo state, Brazil (44o 48’W, 23o 22’S). Bees carrying pollen and/or nectar were captured at nest entrances during 5 min every hour, from sunrise to sunset, once a month. Pollen loads were counted and saved for acetolysis. Nectar w...

Journal: :Ecology 2008
Rebecca E Irwin Lynn S Adler

Pollen movement within and among plants affects inbreeding, plant fitness, and the spatial scale of genetic differentiation. Although a number of studies have assessed how plant and floral traits influence pollen movement via changes in pollinator behavior, few have explored how nectar chemical composition affects pollen transfer. As many as 55% of plants produce secondary compounds in their ne...

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