151 results on '"Proffit, Magali"'
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2. Ozone alters the chemical signal required for plant – insect pollination: The case of the Mediterranean fig tree and its specific pollinator
3. Floral scent of the Mediterranean fig tree: significant inter-varietal difference but strong conservation of the signal responsible for pollinator attraction
4. Ozone exposure induces metabolic stress and olfactory memory disturbance in honey bees.
5. Plants are the drivers of geographic variation of floral odours in brood site pollination mutualisms: A case study of Ficus hirta
6. Pollinator and floral odor specificity among four synchronopatric species of Ceropegia (Apocynaceae) suggests ethological isolation that prevents reproductive interference
7. Overlaps in olfactive signalling coupled with geographic variation may result in localised pollinator sharing between closely related Ficus species
8. Ozone exposure induces metabolic stress and olfactory memory disturbance in honey bees.
9. Pollination along an elevational gradient mediated both by floral scent and pollinator compatibility in the fig and fig-wasp mutualism
10. Molecular phylogenetic analysis and taxonomic reconsideration of Ceropegia hirsuta (Apocynaceae, Asclepiadoideae) reveal a novelty in Thailand, Ceropegia citrina sp. nov., with notes on its pollination ecology
11. Author Correction: Chemical signal is in the blend: bases of plant-pollinator encounter in a highly specialized interaction
12. Plant litter mixture partly mitigates the negative effects of extended drought on soil biota and litter decomposition in a Mediterranean oak forest
13. Mangrove's species are weak isoprenoid emitters
14. Chemical signal is in the blend: bases of plant-pollinator encounter in a highly specialized interaction
15. Host-plant location by the Guatemalan potato moth Tecia solanivora is assisted by floral volatiles
16. Acute ozone exposure impairs detection of floral odor, learning, and memory of honey bees, through olfactory generalization
17. Tropospheric Ozone Alters the Chemical Signal Emitted by an Emblematic Plant of the Mediterranean Region: The True Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia Mill.)
18. Critical thinking in the chemical ecology of mammalian communication: roadmap for future studies
19. Pollinator and Floral Odor Specificity Among Four Synchronopatric Species of Ceropegia (Apocynaceae) Suggests Ethological Isolation That Prevents Reproductive Interference
20. Chemical Ecology: An Integrative and Experimental Science
21. Private Channel: A Single Unusual Compound Assures Specifie Pollinator Attraction in Ficus semicordata
22. Geographic variation of floral scent in a highly specialized pollination mutualism
23. Ozone Induces Distress Behaviors in Fig Wasps with a Reduced Chance of Recovery
24. Complex Interactions on Fig Trees: Ants Capturing Parasitic Wasps as Possible Indirect Mutualists of the Fig-Fig Wasp Interaction
25. Plants Are the Drivers of Geographic Variation of Floral Scents in a Highly Specialized Pollination Mutualism: a Study of Ficus Hirta in China
26. Ozone Pollution Alters Olfaction and Behavior of Pollinators
27. “This is not an Apple”–Yeast Mutualism in Codling Moth
28. Mating Disruption of Guatemalan Potato Moth Tecia Solanivora by Attractive and Non-Attractive Pheromone Blends
29. Attraction and Oviposition of Tuta absoluta Females in Response to Tomato Leaf Volatiles
30. Floral scents: their roles in nursery pollination mutualisms
31. Effets de l’ozone sur les interactions entre plantes et pollinisateurs
32. Chapitre 32. Un réseau trophique complexe : le cas des figuiers
33. Sources of floral scent variation in the food-deceptive orchid Orchis mascula
34. Insect Odorscapes: From Plant Volatiles to Natural Olfactory Scenes
35. Ecologie chimique : une science intégrative et expérimentale
36. Can fine-scale post-pollination variation of fig volatile compounds explain some steps of the temporal succession of fig wasps associated with Ficus racemosa?
37. The Rovaltain Foundation Engages in Pollinator Health
38. Chemical communication between figs and wasps: Variation in wasp perception in Ficus septica and associated wasps
39. With or without you: Effects of the concurrent range expansion of an herbivore and its natural enemy on native species interactions
40. Tracking the elusive history of diversification in plant–herbivorous insect–parasitoid food webs: insights from figs and fig wasps
41. With or without you: Effects of the concurrent range expansion of an herbivore and its natural enemy on native species interactions.
42. ‘Do you remember the first time?’ Host plant preference in a moth is modulated by experiences during larval feeding and adult mating
43. Evidence for intersexual chemical mimicry in a dioecious plant
44. Mating Disruption of Guatemalan Potato Moth Tecia Solanivora by Attractive and Non-Attractive Pheromone Blends
45. Private channels in plant–pollinator mutualisms
46. Private channel: a single unusual compound assures specific pollinator attraction inFicus semicordata
47. Can chemical signals, responsible for mutualistic partner encounter, promote the specific exploitation of nursery pollination mutualisms? - The case of figs and fig wasps
48. Evidence from population genetics that the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete Laccaria amethystina is an actual multihost symbiont
49. Chemical mediation and niche partitioning in non-pollinating fig-wasp communities
50. Private channel: a single unusual compound assures specific pollinator attraction in Ficus semicordata.
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