Home
Agent Gallery
AI Writer
Chat with PDF
Literature Review
Find Topics
Paraphraser
Citation Generator
Extract Data
AI Detector
Toggle Sidebar
Home
Topics
Dionconotus
Sign up
Home
Topics
Dionconotus
Topic
Dionconotus
About:
Dionconotus is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1 publications have been published within this topic receiving 33 citations.
...read more
read less
Trace this topic
Share
Topic Tools
Find unexplored research gaps
Generate a literature review
Explore related concepts
Show more
Papers
Journal Article
•
10.1111/J.1095-8312.2006.00612.X
•
Why be a rewarding trap? The evolution of floral rewards in Arum (Araceae), a genus characterized by saprophilous pollination systems
[...]
Anita Diaz
1
,
Geoffrey C. Kite
2
•
Institutions (2)
Bournemouth University
1
,
Royal Botanic Gardens
2
01 Jun
2006
-
Biological Journal of The Linnean Society
TL;DR:
The finding that floral rewards may result in increased fitness, compared to nonrewarding systems that rely on attracting saprophilic pollinators, suggests that it is possible for rewarding species to evolve from saproPhilosopherous systems.
...read more
read less
Abstract:
Plant species of the genus Arum typically have lure-and-trap pollination systems that are saprophilous (i.e. attracting flies or beetles searching for breeding sites in decaying organic matter). They have been assumed to always attract and trap their pollinators by deception because the inflorescences provide unsuitable breeding grounds for pollinators. The present study explored the possibility that one species, Arum creticum Boiss. & Heldr., which has yellow, sweet-smelling inflorescences, rewards its pollinators and that this increases its success in attracting pollinators over its close relative, Arum idaeum Coust. & Gadoger. The relationship between rewards provided, floral structure, insect attraction, and pollen import and export was examined in two naturally occurring sympatric populations of A. creticum, A. idaeum, and their natural hybrids. The results showed that plants providing more pollen were visited by larger numbers of females of a mining bee Lasioglossum marginatum Brulle as well as adults and nymphs of a hemipteran bug Dionconotus cruentatus creticus Heiss. In A. creticum, L. marginatum was found to be a better outcrossing vector than D. cruentatus in areas where both pollinators occurred because L. marginatum individuals carried more pollen on their bodies and travelled greater distances between inflorescences, thus increasing the potential for outcrossing. The finding that floral rewards may result in increased fitness, compared to nonrewarding systems that rely on attracting saprophilic pollinators, suggests that it is possible for rewarding species to evolve from saprophilous systems. © 2006 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2006, 88, 257–268.
...read more
read less
Go to Paper
41
citations
Save
Cite
Share
Related Topics (5)
Angraecum sesquipedale
16 papers, 1K citations
86% related
Phacelia linearis
8 papers, 535 citations
85% related
Androsace alpina
6 papers, 501 citations
84% related
Abronia umbellata
15 papers, 413 citations
84% related
Arctostaphylos pringlei
6 papers, 529 citations
84% related
Performance Metrics
1
Papers
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
Year
Papers
2006
1