「Pollen」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
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eticulata was one of the species analyzed in a | pollen core samplng study in northern Arizona, in whi |
reading about poppies, where I saw they were a | pollen source. |
ertures are very small spots on the walls of a | pollen, where the wall is thinner and/or softer. |
and thus requires a second grape variety as a | pollen source for full fruit set. |
e stamens and petals, paracytic stomata, and a | pollen morphology distinct from the genera of the sis |
But what is a | pollen source? |
This article does not say what a | pollen source is. |
She also begins to build up a | pollen larder, which will feed her brood. |
and thus requires a second grape variety as a | pollen source. |
Kay Gray itself is female and requires a | pollen source in order to set fruit. |
This article is about | pollen structure. |
Meligethes aeneus is an abundant | pollen beetle in the United Kingdom. |
Syrphid fly, showing some adhering | pollen |
Her work analysing | pollen taken from the sediment in bogs revealed the p |
ly pollinated by blowing a mixture of talc and | pollen collected from selected palms of a variety kno |
Adults generally feed on nectar and | pollen, thus are pollinators of flowers. |
Mexican long-tongued bats feed on nectar and | pollen from agaves and other plants. |
s nectar - but their larva eat both nectar and | pollen. |
plant remains, as well as root structures and | pollen, are also found in the formation. |
ly frugivorous; it may also consume nectar and | pollen. |
Other energy sources include dust and | pollen swept in from other regions. |
known from fossils of its flowers, fruits, and | pollen. |
leafcutting bee larva feed both on nectar and | pollen. |
ke the honeybee (Apis spp.) collect nectar and | pollen from flowers and store them for food. |
d fills the cells with a mixture of nectar and | pollen. |
e in the throat pointing toward the nectar and | pollen. |
r forage or food supply consists of nectar and | pollen from blooming plants within flight range. |
ed from May through June feeding on nectar and | pollen of flowers (especially on Apiaceae species). |
Its diet primarily consists of nectar and | pollen of Eucalypt blossoms, the pollination of which |
en the bumblebee is not foraging), nectar, and | pollen. |
illars are parasitic feeders of wax, honey and | pollen. |
rb-rich grassland where it feeds on nectar and | pollen from a variety of flowers, especially ones tha |
ause Linnaea borealis is self-incompatible and | pollen dispersal is not far, genetic individuals can |
of this solitary bee use collected nectar and | pollen to feed larvae located in nests constructed in |
duction as the flowers are heavy in nectar and | pollen; the resulting honey produced by bees is light |
llow mining bee larvae feed both on nectar and | pollen. |
ber feeding on small insects and on nectar and | pollen of flowers (especially on Apiaceae species). |
Collect nectar and | pollen |
Foliage and | pollen cones |
er's ability to reduce tobacco smoke, dust and | pollen particles in a room. |
They also eat nectar and | pollen. |
dvanced aroids with regards to its flowers and | pollen structure. |
y the larval cells exclusively with nectar and | pollen of ivy flowers (Hedera helix) (hence the Latin |
The flower is sweetly scented and | pollen bright red. |
ffers information services such as traffic and | pollen reports, weather and avalanche forecasts, time |
n pastoral New England is a valuable honey and | pollen tree to 30 x 15 metres, which flowers during l |
Like other ice worms, it subsists on algae and | pollen. |
ts of Africa, where it feeds on the nectar and | pollen of flowers, but is popular in the exotic pet t |
e maceral found in coal formed from spores and | pollen. |
Common Blossom-bat feeds mostly on nectar and | pollen rather than fruit. |
ich continues its development eating honey and | pollen. |
ce - a situation where the incoming nectar and | pollen nearly match the needed food for the hive, or |
All that remain are | pollen from lake beds, hollow endocarps (nuts) found |
Main article: | Pollen (novel) |
) certainly does not need buzz pollination, as | pollen grains are large, sticky and freely dispensed. |
in is not a candidate for buzz pollination, as | pollen is freely dispensed. |
l bees, and a few different kinds of wasps, as | pollen is often the only solid food consumed by all l |
Male plants bear | pollen cones 4 to 7 millimeters long. |
hocolate, green tea, olive oil, argan oil, bee | pollen and many grains are sources. |
an unexpected similarity to that of the birch | pollen allergen Bet v 1 and to bacterial polyketide c |
Like other ragweeds, wind blown | pollen from burro-weed may be highly allergenic. |
nd stamens tipped with anthers which bear blue | pollen. |
The protruding stamens bear blue | pollen on their anthers. |
e are 8 stamens with anthers bearing blue-gray | pollen, and a protruding stigma. |
ens each bearing a large anther with blue-gray | pollen. |
ns tipped with large anthers bearing blue-gray | pollen. |
each holding a large anther bearing blue-gray | pollen. |
The green or palidly brown | pollen cones (male) are long (20-30 cm.), narrow (7 o |
Mega-plant fossils are rare in the park, but | pollen grains and spores collected from here suggest |
roid that infects plants and is transmitted by | pollen and infected seeds or budwood. |
es in these plastids cannot be disseminated by | pollen. |
Sheep grazing in mustard fields were dusted by | pollen from the blossom that turned their undersides |
e) on a sunflower; only the hind tibia carries | pollen |
tid bee; the entire hind leg and abdomen carry | pollen |
a, which is atypical among bees; Hylaeus carry | pollen in the crop, rather than externally, and regur |
ween GM and non-GM fields which actively catch | pollen are called "pollen barriers" or "buffer zones" |
s released large quantitites of characteristic | pollen, which was trapped within the layers of peat p |
Matthew Bivins, Ward Williams, and Christopher | Pollen met and formed Jump, Little Children at the No |
Lady Oxford was born Mary Clare | Pollen, the eldest of the five children of Francis An |
Bees collect | pollen as a protein source to raise their brood. |
he bees do not store honey, females do collect | pollen which they store in the cells of their nests. |
strong drive to collect | pollen |
red from March to June, feeding and collecting | pollen and nectar on early flowering plants, mainly o |
ey bee flies back to the hive after collecting | pollen. |
r in nature bee's work for honey by collecting | pollen. |
Honeybee collecting | pollen |
mm long, most likely to aid them in collecting | pollen and nectar. |
has been identified as an insect that collects | pollen from the cycad, Cycas media. |
resin as a reward, instead of the more common | pollen or nectar (all three rewards are found in diff |
ia japonica (Japanese cedar) - the most common | pollen allergen in Japan; and P56 and P59, which shar |
Dung often contains | pollen which means fossilised dung middens can be use |
Each cell contains | pollen and nectar, then one egg is laid inside a cell |
s of clothianidin on bees through contaminated | pollen and nectar. |
Exposure through contaminated | pollen and nectar and potential toxic effects therefo |
to wide flowers with little nectar and copious | pollen, which are more attractive to beetles. |
Dandelion | pollen |
Dandelion | pollen may cause allergic reactions when eaten, or ad |
15 February - Daniel | Pollen, politician, ninth Premier of New Zealand (b.1 |
2 June (in Ireland): Daniel | Pollen, 9th premier of New Zealand. |
un-off after the end of the last deglaciation, | pollen analysis performed as early as 1940 had alread |
are united by the possession of a distinctive | pollen type assigned to the form genus Classopollis. |
Droserapites | pollen grains are united in tetrads (groups of four). |
t the cell plate during cytokinesis and during | pollen development. |
flow filtration (HAF), which filters any dust, | pollen, airborne contaminants and resultant debris fr |
remove from the air at least 99.999% of dust, | pollen, mold, bacteria and any airborne particles wit |
s, Eudicotyledonae has three apertures in each | pollen. |
are unusual among butterflies in that they eat | pollen as well as sip nectar. |
However, the most efficient | pollen barriers are made of non-GM crops of the same |
elements were subsequently shown to be either | pollen (including that of ragwort) and fungal spores |
ancient lake sediments containing Early Eocene | pollen, this age thus giving a minimum estimate for t |
However, they must independently forage for | pollen provisions and protect their nest and brood. |
y to the longer average distances required for | pollen travel, no specific co-existence measures or i |
Is necessary for | pollen elongation for pollen tube formation. |
so a major component of the Alexander test for | pollen staining. |
(CADR) numbers: one for tobacco smoke, one for | pollen and one for dust. |
ructions make the plant dependent upon foreign | pollen for normal seed set. |
It is a form taxon known only from fossil | pollen. |
ost of Stockholm to learn his method of fossil | pollen analysis . |
F. halensis was described based on fossilised | pollen from sediments in the Hale Basin of central Au |
It is known only from fossilised | pollen found in Eocene deposits of East Germany. |
red anthers which slowly turn soft yellow from | pollen. |
t palaeoclimatic reconstructions obtained from | pollen zones, marine and ice-core records, but these |
mb to lay eggs, usually due to congestion from | pollen or honey, the bee colony may be more prone to |
t 10,000 to 15,000 years as reconstructed from | pollen and other paleoenvironmental data from over a |
From | pollen core data, a portion of the prehistoric distri |
They also like to lick hard, tart fruit, | pollen and nectar found on Coonatorious Palm trees. |
They also like to lick soft, sweet fruit, | pollen and nectar. |
They also like to lick soft, sweet fruit; | pollen; and nectar. |
Females gather | pollen and nectar as food from a variety of plants, a |
iginally non-GM plants, also catch a lot of GM | pollen, produce a lot of GM fruit and are considered |
GM and non-GM cultivations for most of the GM | pollen to fall to the ground before reaching non-GM p |
If large amounts of GM | pollen fertilise crops in a non-GM field, that harves |
oftening, abscission, emergence of root hairs, | pollen tube invasion of the stigma and style, meriste |
h contain a brood cell, and once each cell has | pollen and nectar for the larva to feed on - a small |
tt Bousman, and Makisang Nyakale 2005 Holocene | pollen from swamp, cave and hyrax dung deposits at Bl |
to the passion of Sir John Michael Hungerford | Pollen, 7th Baronet of Redenham. |
d that neonicotinic residues can accumulate in | pollen and nectar of treated plants and represent a p |
surface of the abdomen which are also used in | pollen transport; there is one family of bees, Megach |
esearched by members of the laboratory include | pollen records and tree rings as a proxy for past cli |
levels of carbon dioxide will greatly increase | pollen production. |
RBDV is usually transmitted through infected | pollen. |
hes are also capable of spreading the infected | pollen. |
s; however, the translocation of residues into | pollen and nectar of treated plants and the potential |
ps to lure flies into the plant to contact its | pollen. |
eproduction, as the pollinator distributes its | pollen. |
can be distinguished from other genera by its | pollen, and forms the Rhaponticum group of about 40 s |
is wife Henrietta, the eldest daughter of John | Pollen. |
unique for two reasons: first, the only known | pollen host is a single species-the yellow passionflo |
y recognized in almost all cases, as they lack | pollen collecting structures (the scopa) and do not c |
bee larva hatches it consumes the host larva's | pollen ball, and, if the female cleptoparasite has no |
A testing has shown that Wealthy is the likely | pollen parent. |
o mid green, fairly stout, and 4-7 cm long.The | pollen is released early compared to other pines in t |
The petals are under tension and hold loose | pollen; when the flower is probed, the pollen is rele |
rs during his marriage to former dancer Maggie | Pollen. |
The main nectar source and main | pollen source differ widely with the latitude, region |
The flowers are catkins; the male ( | pollen) catkins are produced in clusters (not singly |
The removal of male ( | pollen) parts of a plant, largely for controlled poll |
American Chestnut male ( | pollen) catkins |
The male ( | pollen) cones are 2 cm long, shedding pollen in sprin |
The flowers are catkins; the male ( | pollen) catkins are 2-15 cm long, the female catkins |
al plants, artifacts, archeological materials, | pollen, and photographs. |
items (in predatory wasps), or masses of mixed | pollen and nectar (in bees); only rarely are other so |
ork led to the publication of the first modern | pollen diagram in 1916, the same year that von Post p |
separating them, on which genetically modified | pollen can settle without fertilising non-GM crops. |
These bees store mostly | pollen moistened with a small amount of nectar which |
The adults feed on nectar, | pollen and aphid honeydew but the larvae are active p |
In male-sterile plants, no | pollen is produced. |
ants, flowers do not open, and thus release no | pollen. |
nimal which selectively eats the nutrient-rich | pollen produced by angiosperms and gymnosperms. |
rarily to ensure the gathering and transfer of | pollen. |
In the cells they store a supply of | pollen and nectar as food for the larvae. |
fields without actively hindering the drift of | pollen. |
The examination of | pollen and peat samples indicated that the plough cou |
Each plant receives a blend of | pollen from a large number of individuals each having |
bee adds an egg to each with a food supply of | pollen and nectar paste. |
This kind of | pollen barrier is often called a "buffer strip" or "b |
end will help in restricting the placement of | pollen stores. |
the bottom leaves of the top, with creation of | pollen and seeds happening in the same plant. |
fertilisation will occur only if any grains of | pollen happen to have mutations that will suppress th |
iage and likened its appearance to a "cloud of | pollen blown from willow catkins." |
likely cleptoparasites, indicated by a lack of | pollen collecting structures in their female morpholo |
ground, and provisions are a soupy mixture of | pollen and nectar in cells with a waxlike waterproof |
traight run pointing directly to the source of | pollen or nectar that the forager has been visiting. |
n species that are wind-pollinated.Transfer of | pollen grains from anther to the stigma of another fl |
today- treeless with grasses representative of | Pollen Assemblage Zone MNH-I reflecting "mixed agricu |
Melissopalynology is the study of | pollen contained in honey and, in particular, the pol |
egs facilitate the collection and transport of | pollen. |
en Botanical Garden and one of the pioneers of | pollen analysis in quaternary geology. |
The plant benefits from the spread of | pollen between flowers, while the pollinator receives |
the habit of gathering floral oils instead of | pollen for use as a larval food; this behavior is oth |
tations involving highly specific placement of | pollen packets (pollinia) on the bodies of the male o |
emporary with Lindow Man; however, analysis of | pollen in the peat suggests there was some cultivatio |
hey construct small cells containing a ball of | pollen mixed with nectar, upon which an egg is laid, |
, facilitating the collection and transport of | pollen. |
logamy is used specifically to mean the use of | pollen from one plant to fertilize the flower of anot |
above the timberline (2,200 meters) feeding on | pollen of Helianthemum species. |
The larvae are fed on | pollen, which like other bees, is carried on hairs of |
e encountered from May through July feeding on | pollen and nectar. |
oligoleptic species, feeding its young only on | pollen of a few species of Dipsacaceae (Knautia arven |
as functional jaws and it feeds as an adult on | pollen grains, mainly from the flowers of Carex speci |
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