Search

Your search keyword '"NECTARIES"' showing total 1,968 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "NECTARIES" Remove constraint Descriptor: "NECTARIES"
1,968 results on '"NECTARIES"'

Search Results

1. Ants may buffer the Janzen–Connell effect in a tropical forest in Southwest China.

2. Ant sharing by plant species bearing extrafloral nectaries has a low impact on plant herbivory in a tropical system.

3. Disruption of pollination by herbivores is rescued by nectar yeasts.

4. Viola fuscopurpurea (Violaceae), a new species from Chongqing, China.

5. Comparing Ant Activity and Plants Bearing Extrafloral Nectaries in Rockland Habitats of the Florida Keys with Those of the Everglades and the Bahamas.

6. Unravelling the Homology between Calycine Glands in Malpighiales: New Data from Basal Malpighiaceae.

7. Issue Information.

8. Convergent evolution of fern nectaries facilitated independent recruitment of ant-bodyguards from flowering plants.

9. Fritillaria yalcinii (Liliaceae), a new species from southeastern Turkey.

10. Ant protection effectiveness in myrmecophytes and extrafloral nectary plants.

11. Histochemical, metabolic and ultrastructural changes in leaf patelliform nectaries explain extrafloral nectar synthesis and secretion in Clerodendrum chinense.

12. Una nueva especie de Souroubea (Marcgraviaceae, Ericales) de Colombia.

13. A cornucopia of diversity—Ranunculales as a model lineage.

14. 1093. Agapetes oxycoccoides J. Murata, Nob. Tanaka & Ohi‐Toma: Ericaceae.

15. EMERGING INFERTILITY BIOTHREAT AND GYNECOLOGICAL PANDEMIC POLYCYSTIC OVARY SYNDROME (PCOS): MOLECULAR BIOGENESIS WITH EMPHASIS ON TREATMENT.

16. Evolution of the floral nectaries in the Primulaceae sensus lato (Ericales).

17. Emerging Trends in Ant–Pollinator Conflict in Extrafloral Nectary-Bearing Plants.

18. Spider–Plant Interaction: The Role of Extrafloral Nectaries in Spider Attraction and Their Influence on Plant Herbivory and Reproduction.

19. Secretory Tissues and Volatile Components of Disc Florets in Several Wild Helianthus L. Species.

20. Three out of one: revising the species delimitation of the tree fern Gymnosphaera salletii (Cyatheaceae), with particular reference to the foliar nectary.

21. Studies of Asian 'Calliandra' lead to expansion of Sanjappa (Fabaceae‐Caesalpinioideae).

22. Colleters, osmophores, and nectaries in the species Ceropegia lenewtonii: a sapromyiophilous stapeliad (Asclepiadoideae, Apocynaceae).

23. Origin and Function of Amino Acids in Nectar and Nectaries of Pitcairnia Species with Particular Emphasis on Alanine and Glutamine.

24. Comparative floral anatomy and evolutionary interpretations of cryptic dioecy in Ocotea velloziana (Lauraceae)

25. Does leaf morphoanatomy corroborate systematics and biogeographic events in the Paleotropical genus Acridocarpus (Malpighiaceae)?

26. Climate and ant diversity explain the global distribution of ant‐plant mutualisms.

27. Diversity and functional roles of floral glands in Malpighiaceae: insights in Lophopterys floribunda W.R. Anderson & C. Davis.

28. Diversity of Leaf Glands and Their Putative Functions in Rhamnaceae Species.

29. Context-Dependent Ant-Pollinator Mutualism Impacts Fruit Set in a Hummingbird-Pollinated Plant.

30. Tacinga paiaia (Cactaceae), a New Species from the Semi-Arid Region of Brazil.

31. Inaugural Description of Extrafloral Nectaries in Sapindaceae: Structure, Diversity and Nectar Composition.

32. Chasmogamy and entomophily in Burmannia disticha (Burmanniaceae).

33. Post‐secretory synthesis of a natural analog of iron‐gall ink in the black nectar of Melianthus spp.

34. Floral nectary structure, nectar presentation and morpho-anatomical analysis of male-fertile and malesterile anthers in onion (Allium cepa, Amaryllidaceae).

35. Plant species with larger extrafloral nectaries produce better quality nectar when needed and interact with the best ant partners.

36. Identity and Phenotypic Variability of a Passion Fruit Cultivar in Lucban, Quezon Province, Philippines.

37. The dispersal of microbes among and within flowers by butterflies.

38. Fritillaria karakocanensis (Liliaceae), a new species of the F. crassifolia group from Anatolia (Turkey).

39. Dear neighbor: Trees with extrafloral nectaries facilitate defense and growth of adjacent undefended trees.

40. Croton L. (Crotonoideae, Euphorbiaceae) in a protected area in Northeast Brazil.

41. Occurrence of Volatile Organic Compounds and Extrafloral Nectaries in Tropical Rainforest Species in Danum Valley Conservation Area, Sabah, Malaysia.

42. Variation of the Time Course of Inducibility of Indirect Defenses According to Plant Tissue and Severity of Damage.

43. Comparative flower morphology in Cyrtanthus elatus (Amaryllidaceae).

44. 1064. Agapetes grandiflora Hook.f.: Ericaceae.

45. Phylotranscriptomics of Swertiinae (Gentianaceae) reveals that key floral traits are not phylogenetically correlated.

46. Synthesis and perspectives on the study of ant‐plant interaction networks: A global overview.

47. Time course of inducibility of indirect responses in an ant‐defended plant.

48. The Morpho-Anatomy of Nectaries and Chemical Composition of Nectar in Pear Cultivars with Different Susceptibility to Erwinia amlylovora.

49. Deterioration of extrafloral nectaries and leaf damages caused by air pollution in a Brazilian native species from the Atlantic Forest.

50. Comparative Nectary Morphology across Cleomaceae (Brassicales).

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources