20 results on '"Funamoto, Daichi"'
Search Results
2. AMBUSH PREDATORS ON FLOWERS AT NIGHT : PREDATION PRESSURE ON MOTHS
3. Nocturnal ambush predators and their potential impact on flower-visiting moths
4. Entomophily in Acorus calamus : implications for brood-site pollination mutualism in basal-most monocots
5. SWEET FLAG FLOWERS ACT AS CRADLES FOR TINY BEETLE POLLINATORS
6. PRECISE STERNOTRIBIC POLLINATION BY SETTLING MOTHS IN ADENOPHORA MAXIMOWICZIANA (CAMPANULACEAE)
7. Pollination biology of a rare serpentine plant, Japonolirionosense (Petrosaviaceae)
8. Pollination biology of a rare serpentine plant, Japonolirionosense (Petrosaviaceae).
9. Sexual dimorphism in a dioecious species with complex, specialist‐pollinated flowers
10. Brown‐colored nectar in the insect‐pollinated flowers of Asian moonseed
11. Relative importance of diurnal and nocturnal pollinators for reproduction in the early spring flowering shrubStachyurus praecox(Stachyuraceae)
12. Plant-pollinator interactions in East Asia: a review
13. Japanese white-eyes (Aves: Zosteropidae) as potential pollinators of summer-flowering Taxillus kaempferi (Loranthaceae)
14. Relative importance of diurnal and nocturnal pollinators for reproduction in the early spring flowering shrub Stachyurus praecox (Stachyuraceae).
15. Japanese white-eyes (Aves: Zosteropidae) as potential pollinators of summer-floweringTaxillus kaempferi(Loranthaceae)
16. Fork-tailed caterpillars bite off their long anal prolegs to pupate in fallen branches
17. Arthropods associated with fungal galls: do large galls support more abundant and diverse inhabitants?
18. Settling moths as potential pollinators of Uncaria rhynchophylla (Rubiaceae)
19. Arthropods associated with fungal galls: do large galls support more abundant and diverse inhabitants?
20. Arthropods associated with fungal galls: do large galls support more abundant and diverse inhabitants?
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.