National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
The effect of experience and floral traits on preferences and flower constancy in Eristalis tenax
Haveldová, Alice ; Janovský, Zdeněk (advisor) ; Mikát, Michael (referee)
Intraspecific pollen transfer is crucial for ensuring successful pollination and subsequent reproduction of many plant species. Mechanisms directly influenced by plants, that can increase the proportion of intraspecific pollen through their flower form (individual floral traits) are preferences and constancy of pollinators. The proportion of intraspecific pollen transfer increases with higher preferences or constancy of the pollinator. Pollinator preferences and constancy tend to change over its lifetime based on experience with the flowers they have visited. Very few studies have examined the effect of experience on preferences and especially constancy in relation to multiple floral traits in hoverflies (Syrphidae, Diptera), which are an important pollinator group. In this study, I investigated the degree of preference and constancy of common drone fly Eristalis tenax L (Syrphidae) as a function of two floral traits, colour and size, and as a function of experience. I did so by monitoring visits and flights in arrays of artificial flowers. The hoverflies were of two origins: naïve (reared under laboratory conditions, with no previous experience of visiting flowers) and experienced (captured in the wild with previous experience). Naïve individuals made decisions primarily based on colour, with size...
Reproductive form and function in trait-based plant ecology: from species to communities
CSERCSÁNÉ VOJTKÓ, Anna
This thesis focuses on reproductive functional trait patterns across different spatial scales. The following sections document novel results and their relevance in modern plant functional ecological theory. The thesis evaluates evolutionary and environmental processes driving functional trait variability with a special focus on sexual and vegetative reproduction. First, the thesis provides a synthesis on the role of sexual reproductive functional traits in plant community assembly processes pointing to current knowledge gaps (Chapter I). Then, using publicly available databases as well as data from field measurements, the following sections aim at filling these knowledge gaps. On the species level, sexual reproductive traits are identified as one of the most important axes of variability in plant form and function (Chapter II). On the level of communities, functional and phylogenetic diversity is studied within and across different habitat types (Chapter III and IV).

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.