10 BÜCHER, DIE MIT «ZOOGAMOUS» IM ZUSAMMENHANG STEHEN
Entdecke den Gebrauch von
zoogamous in der folgenden bibliographischen Auswahl. Bücher, die mit
zoogamous im Zusammenhang stehen und kurze Auszüge derselben, um seinen Gebrauch in der Literatur kontextbezogen darzustellen.
1
Cambial Growth, Root Growth, and Reproductive Growth
A very interesting example of zoogamous pollination occurs in all species of fig (
Ficus). Pollination in this genus involves activity of chalcid wasps which cannot
develop anywhere except in the receptacles of figs. As there is a period of
several ...
2
Textbook of pollen analysis [by] Knut Faegri [and] Johs. ...
In some cases at any rate pollen-analytical experience indicates that such
masses may break up in fossilization. Although pollen grains of obligate
zoogamous species are occasionally found in peat or sediments, they are always
infrequent, ...
Knut Faegri, Johannes Iversen, 1964
3
Career Opportunities in Forensic Science
Other plant species, called zoogamous plants, produce small amounts of pollen
that becomes attached to insects, ... the plants. pollen from zoogamous plants is
also transferred directly to objects or surfaces in contact with the plants. these ...
Susan Echaore-McDavid, Richard A. McDavid, 2009
4
New developments in palynomorph sampling, extraction, and ...
In a larger group of plants, called zoogamous plants, pollination is dependent
upon the transport of pollen by some type of insect (i.e., bee, wasp, beetle, moth,
ant) or animal (i.e., hummingbirds, lizards, nectar-feeding marsupials and bats, ...
Vaughn M. Bryant, John H. Wrenn, 1998
5
A grain of truth: how pollen brought a murderer to justice
Zoogamous flowers are usually quite conspicuous or decorative and have canny
ways of attracting pollinators. Many produce nectar for insects and animals to
feed on, and some even have nectar guides, such as dots or lines on the petals, ...
6
Contributions Series - American Association of Stratigraphic ...
In a larger group of plants, called zoogamous plants, pollination is dependent
upon the transport of pollen by some type of insect (i.e., bee, wasp, beetle, moth,
ant) or animal (i.e., hummingbirds, lizards, nectar-feeding marsupials and bats, ...
American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists, 1998
7
Text-book of modern pollen analysis
Although pollen grains of obligate zoogamous species are occasionally found in
peat or sediments, they are always infrequent, and their occurrence rather
irregular. Consequently they should not be treated on a par with anemogamous ...
Knut Faegri, Johannes Iversen, 1950
8
Fundamentals of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy
Thisthen develops into the fruit, which may also includeotherparts oftheflowers.
The flowersare typically fertilizedby animals(i.e. zoogamous; mostly insects, but
alsobirds, bats and spiders). Many species of this huge group have secondarily ...
Michael Heinrich, Joanne Barnes, Simon Gibbons, 2012
9
Introduction to Marine Micropaleontology
Initial pollen dispersal from the plant to the surrounding environment is primarily
anemophilous (by wind), zoogamous (animal) and hydrophilous (water); initial
diffusion is comparatively unimpotant and dispersal distance short. Estimates
vary ...
B.U. Haq, A. Boersma, 1998
... be more widely distributed on land, in contrast to the lower plants such as
mosses and ferns that are handicapped for they ought to have water to undertake
the zoogamous mode of spermatic passage and thus have a restricted
distribution.
A. K. Shukla, M. R. Vijayaraghavan, B. Chaudhry, 1998