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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Effects of Road Dust on the Pollination and Reproduction of Wildflowers

Waser, Nickolas M., Price, Mary V., Casco, Genesis, Diaz, Maria, Morales, Asia Liza, Solverson, Jennie 02 1900 (has links)
Premise of research. Dust particles and pollen grains are similar in size. Dust deposition might therefore influence the pollination and reproduction of flowering plants. Little is known about such effects, however, despite more general interest in ecological effects of dust. Methodology. We used observational and experimental methods to explore whether dust generated by traffic on unpaved roads affects the amounts of pollen received and numbers of seeds produced by four species of native wildflowers in the western United States. Pivotal results. Flowers of Nuttall's larkspur (Delphinium nuttallianum), scarlet gilia (Ipomopsis aggregata), Lewis flax (Linumlewisii), and sulphur paintbrush (Castilleja sulphurea) growing 1-2mfrom a road received substantially more dust and less pollen than those growing 40-50 m away. We observed the same pattern when we transplanted individuals of the first two species into pots and placed pots near to compared with far from a road. Experimental "hand dusting" of scarlet gilia and Lewis flax plants also reduced stigma pollen loads to a degree that resembled the average effect of road proximity for those species. On the other hand, numbers of seeds per flower ("seed set") did not vary consistently for any species as a function of road proximity or hand-dusting treatment. Conclusions. Several mechanisms might contribute to the different effects of dust on pollen loads and seed set. Wediscuss four possible mechanisms, which we refer to as pollen excess, pollen quality, resource limitation, and compensatory herbivory. These mechanisms suggest avenues for further study of dust, pollination, and plant reproduction with this and other systems.
2

Pollination failure in traditionally managed hay meadows of low quality : Comparing two different pollination strategies

Nilsson, Tobias January 2012 (has links)
Today traditionally managed wooded hay meadows only exist in small fractions of their former distributions. Because of the fragmentation and degeneration of hay meadows and the fact that pollinating insect diversity and abundance also are declining, pollination services in these habitats requires attention. To examine the pollination services in traditionally managed hay meadows I collected Ranunculus acris (Buttercup) in 20 meadows of varying quality on Gotland and evaluated the mean seed set and mean number of produced seeds per plant. I also collected Filipendula vulgaris (Dropwort) in 18 meadows and evaluated the mean seed set to be able to compare the pollination success of the insect pollinated R. acris with the wind pollinated F. vulgaris. A range of habitat variables were collected in the meadows and in older surveys to examine their relative impact on seed set. I found significantly higher seed set for R. acris in the meadows with higher habitat quality, than in meadows with lower quality. In contrast seed set in F. vulgaris was not related to habitat quality. The population density also seemed to play an important role in fertilization rate for R. acris, through increased seed set in high density areas, while plant height was positively correlated with number of produced seeds. For F. vulgaris seed set was positively correlated with moss cover, and number of seeds per plant was positively correlated with population density. These results suggest that reproductive success among insect pollinated plants are more sensitive to habitat degeneration than among wind pollinated plants. The status of pollination services in traditionally managed wooded hay meadows should be evaluated further.
3

Is Plant Fitness Proportional to Seed Set? An Experiment and a Spatial Model

Campbell, Diane R., Brody, Alison K., Price, Mary V., Waser, Nickolas M., Aldridge, George 12 1900 (has links)
Individual differences in fecundity often serve as proxies for differences in overall fitness, especially when it is difficult to track the fate of an individual's offspring to reproductive maturity. Using fecundity may be biased, however, if density-dependent interactions between siblings affect survival and reproduction of offspring from high- and low-fecundity parents differently. To test for such density-dependent effects in plants, we sowed seeds of the wildflower Ipomopsis aggregata (scarlet gilia) to mimic partially overlapping seed shadows of pairs of plants, one of which produced twice as many seeds. We tested for differences in offspring success using a genetic marker to track offspring to flowering multiple years later. Without density dependence, the high-fecundity parent should produce twice as many surviving offspring. We also developed a model that considered the geometry of seed shadows and assumed limited survivors so that the number of juvenile recruits is proportional to the area. Rather than a ratio of 2:1 offspring success from high- versus low-fecundity parents, our model predicted a ratio of 1.42:1, which would translate into weaker selection. Empirical ratios of juvenile offspring and of flowers produced conformed well to the model's prediction. Extending the model shows how spatial relationships of parents and seed dispersal patterns modify inferences about relative fitness based solely on fecundity.
4

Algorithms for the selection of optimal spaced seed sets for transposable element identification

Li, Hui 30 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
5

Reproductive patterns of birches (Betula spp.) in northern Sweden

Holm, Stig-Olov January 1994 (has links)
The aim of this thesis was to study patterns of reproduction of Betula pendula and B. pubescens coll. along an altitudinal, coastal-inland, gradient in northern Sweden. The altitudinal variation was related to the distribution of the birch taxa along the gradient. Six years field data showed a steep decrease of seed germinability of B. pendula towards its altitudinal range limit in the Scandes every year. In contrast, B. pubescens ssp. pubescens showed significant positive correlations between seed germinability and altitude in three of the six years. Furthermore, there was a highly significant positive correlation between seed weight and altitude for B. pubescens coll., but not for B. pendula. Production of viable seeds fluctuated strongly between years in most populations, except in marginal B. pendula populations in the mountain area where it was constantly very low. On average 15 - 41 % of the seeds produced in B. pendula populations above 400 m altitude were attacked by gall midges (Semudobia ssp.). Corresponding values for B. pendula populations below 400 m altitude were 4 - 7 %. In B. pubescens populations, the seeds attacked by Semudobia ssp. never exceeded 3 %. The high frequency of Semudobia attackes in high altitude marginal B. pendula populations was suggested to be due to limited resources for defense against the seed predator. A 3-yr study documented large variations in pollination and seed quality between taxa, high and low altitude populations, and between years. Empty seeds (without embryos) dominated among the sampled seeds in most cases. This proportion was decreased by pollen addition, in both B. pendula and B. pubescens, in mountain populations, but not in coastal populations. The high percentage of empty seeds was therefore suggested to be partly caused by pollen-limitation, but failure of pollen tube penetration - fertilisation, or maternal resource supply could also have had an influence. A laboratory experiment showed increased pollen germination and length of the longest pollen tube per style after increased pollination. The correlations between number and length of pollen tubes per style were however mostly low in natural populations, suggesting low probability of pollen competition in the natural situation. Sowing experiments indicated that differences in initial seedling density between B. pendula and B. pubescens was more affected by interspecific differences in seed quality than by interspecific differences in survival of seedlings after establishment A study of the age structure of a B. pendula stand, planted about 250 m above its natural altitudinal limit, indicated that this birch may reproduce above its recent range limit during temporally warmer periods. It was concluded that the level of accumulated resources in B. pendula in marginal sites in the Scandes would mostly be too low for completion of the reproductive cycle. In contrast, B. pubescens ssp. pubescens is able to accumulate enough rescources for reproduction also at relative high altitudes. / <p>Diss. (sammanfattning) Umeå : Umeå universitet, 1994, härtill 5 uppsatser.</p> / digitalisering@umu
6

Grazing regimes and plant reproduction in semi-natural grasslands /

Wissman, Jörgen, January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Uppsala : Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet, 2006. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
7

EFFECTS OF DISTANCE FROM INVASIVE LYTHRUM SALICARIA ON POLLINATOR VISITATION RATE AND REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS IN NATIVE LYTHRUM ALATUM

Kinyo, Anthony Steven January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
8

Způsob rozmnožování a reprodukční zabezpečení diploidních a polyploidních jestřábníků (Hieracium s. str.) / Mode of reproduction and reproductive assurance of diploid and polyploid hawkweeds (Hieracium s. str.)

Zdvořák, Pavel January 2017 (has links)
The mode of reproduction can greatly influence the demography and the evolutionary success of the taxon. In the case of autonomous asexual formation seeds are apomictic taxa fully independent of pollinators and compatible partners. For sexual taxa with strict autoincompatibility it is the opposite, i.e. sexual taxa need pollinators and compatible partners for birth of offspring. Therefore, in marginal population and for more extreme situation with lower pollinating activity will have apomictic taxa a higher level of reproductive assurance than sexual taxa vascular plants. This hypothesis was tested in natural populations of apomictic and sexual taxa. In the diploma thesis we therefore investigate the method mode of reproduction and reproductive assurance of 52 taxa of the genus Hieracium s. str. (family Asteraceae) in Europe. Of these, 12 were diploid sexually diploid taxa and 42 polyploid apomictic reproductive taxa. From these taxa we harvested seeds from fully developed capitulum and we determined the potential (total number of seeds in the capitulum) and the realized (the percentage of well-developed seeds at the capitulum). The ploidy of the offspring (the embryos and the seedling) and method origins of seeds we examined using flow cytometry. The results show that the plants of diploid species...
9

Faune pollinisatrice, paysage et échelle spatiale des flux de pollen chez brassica napus l. (brassicaceae) / Pollinator fauna, landscape and spacial scale of pollen flow of brassica napus l. (brassicaceae)

Chifflet, Rémy 16 December 2010 (has links)
L’intérêt pour la dispersion des gènes via le pollen a augmenté avec les cultures de plantes génétiquement modifiées. A ce jour, les données expérimentales ainsi que la modélisation portant sur les mouvements du pollen de colza, Brassica napus L., à l’échelle du paysage ne différencie pas clairement la part du vent et des insectes dans cette dispersion. Cependant, l’estimation de la dispersion des gènes par le pollen reste une condition nécessaire pour la gestion des risques d’échappement des (trans-)gènes vers l’environnement et les cultures conventionnelles. A travers cette thèse, nous avons pu mettre en évidence qu’une grande diversité d’insectes pollinisateurs pouvait transporter du pollen viable entre différentes plantes de colza sur des distances importantes (>1.1 km). La diversité d’insectes varie d’une région à l’autre et d’une année sur l’autre. Cependant, bien que la majorité des insectes sur une zone de grande production de colza ait du pollen de cette culture sur leur corps, seulement 39,4 % des insectes capturés sur des plantes mâle-stériles transportent du pollen de colza viable. Bien que nous n’ayons pas pu déterminer avec précision la part du vent et des insectes dans le pollinisation du colza, il semblerait que les insectes participent de façon plus importante à la pollinisation de plantes présentes en bordures de champs, augmentant ainsi le taux de pollinisation croisée. Nos résultats fournissent des données fiables pour améliorer les modèles de dispersion pollinique pour des cultures entomophiles à l’échelle du paysage. Ces modèles sont essentiels pour l’aide à la gestion afin de réduire la dispersion des gènes par le pollen des cultures génétiquement modifiées vers les plantes sauvages ou les cultures conventionnelles / Interest in pollen-borne gene dispersal has grown with the cultivation of genetically modified plants. To date both experimental data and models of oilseed rape (OSR) Brassica napus pollen movement at the landscape scale do not clearly differentiate between wind- and insect-mediated dispersal. Estimations of pollen-borne gene dispersal would be valuable for managing potential escapes of transgenes. Our study provides clear evidence that a large variety of insect species can transfer viable pollen between oilseed rape plants over considerable distances (>1.1 km). Insect’s diversity according to geographical site and years. However, the majority of pollinator have OSR pollen in their body hairs, only 39.4% of the insects caught on male-sterile flowers carried OSR pollen. Although we could not determine with precision the role of the wind and the insects in the OSR pollination, it would seem that insects take part in a more important way in pollination of plants present in edges of fields, thus increasing cross pollination rate. Our results provide valuable data to improve models of pollen dispersal for entomophilous crops at the landscape scale. These models are essential to help land-managers reduce pollen-borne gene dispersal from genetically modified plants to wild relative and field planted with non-GM crops
10

Ausprägung wichtiger Eigenschaften für die generative Vermehrung einer gartenbaulichen Modell-Kultur unter dem Einfluss von Genotyp und Umwelt

Ghanem, Ghofran 18 November 2011 (has links)
Die vorliegende Arbeit prüft bei der gärtnerischen Modell-Kultur Cyclamen den Einfluss des Genotyps (interspezifische Hybriden) auf generative Merkmale sowie bei C. persicum `Melody´ den Einfluss von Kultivierungsmaßnahmen wie die Besiedelung der Wurzeln durch einen symbiontischen Pilz (Piriformospora indica) in Kombination mit einem differenzierten Phosphor-Angebot auf vegetative und generative Merkmale: (1) Pflanzendurchmesser, (2) Blühzeitpunkt und Blütenanzahl, (3) Anzahl Samenanlagen pro Fruchtknoten, (4) Vitalität von Pollen und Samenanlagen, (5) Mikrosporogenese, (6) Befruchtungsvorgang (Pollenschlauchwachstum, Anteil Fruchtknoten mit Pollenschläuchen, Anzahl Pollenschläuche im Griffel und Penetration der Pollenschläuche in die Micropyle), (7) abortierte Blüten nach der Bestäubung (8) Samenbildung und (9) Samenanzahl. / The present paper investigates Cyclamen as an horticultural model-culture. A main Focus is on the characteristics of the Cyclamen genotype, notably with interspecific hybrids. Further, Cyclamen persicum cv. served as a model to analyse effects on parameters of pollination, seed development and number of ovules per ovary, which are caused by a root colonization of the seed bearer with the symbiotic fungus Piriformospora indica (Piri) in combination with a differentiated phosphorus supply. In this regard, plant diameter, flowering time and flower number, the viability of pollen and ovules, the microsporogenesis, the growth of pollen tubes, the seed formation and the seed count were considered among important parameters of pollination and seed development.

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