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Avian nectar robbers of Passiflora mixta (Pasifloraceae): Do they have a positive effect on the plant?
(Interciencia 36(8): 587-592Venezuela, 2014)
Notes on floral visitors in Seemannia sylvatica (Kunth) Hanstein (Gesneriaceae)Notas sobre los visitadores florales de Seemannia sylvatica (Kunth) Hanstein (Gesneriaceae)
(Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, 2012)
I’ve been robbed! – Can changes in floral traits discourage bee pollination?
(2019-11-01)
Some floral visitors collect nectar by piercing flower external whorls, acting as nectar robbers. They leave robbery vestiges, which can cause changes in floral characteristics, including physical and chemical signals that ...
A trade-off between the amount and distance of pollen dispersal triggered by the mixed foraging behaviour of Sephanoides sephaniodes (Trochilidae) on Lapageria rosea (Philesiaceae)
(GAUTHIER-VILLARS/EDITIONS ELSEVIER, 2006-05)
Nectar thieves may increase or decrease pollinator-mediated pollen flow and thus may have positive or negative effects on plant reproductive success. In temperate rainforests of South America, the hummingbird Sephanoides ...
Flower mites decrease nectar availability in the rain-forest bromeliad Neoregelia johannis
(Cambridge Univ PressNew YorkEUA, 2010)
Relationship between floral tube length and nectar robbing in Duranta erecta L. (Verbenaceae)
(WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, 2008-06-02)
Although nectar robbing is a common phenomenon in plant species with tubular flowers or flowers with nectar
spurs, the potential effect of this illegitimate interaction on plant reproductive success has not received ...
Pollination of Anemopaegma album (Bignoniaceae) with focus on floral nectar as the mediator of interactions with mutualistic and antagonistic bees
(2015)
We focused our study on the pollination of Anemopaegma album, a Bignoniaceae species from and on the features of primary attractive, the nectar, which mediate the interaction with mutualists and antagonists bees. We ...