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「Pollen」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)

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are united by the possession of a distinctive pollen type assigned to the form genus Classopollis.
tid bee; the entire hind leg and abdomen carry pollen
The article below is mainly about the pollen source from a beekeeping perspective.
so yellow and the anthers shed abundant yellow pollen.
d that neonicotinic residues can accumulate in pollen and nectar of treated plants and represent a p
ween GM and non-GM fields which actively catch pollen are called "pollen barriers" or "buffer zones"
ng floral oils rather than (or in addition to) pollen or nectar.
ng floral oils rather than (or in addition to) pollen or nectar.
ng floral oils rather than (or in addition to) pollen or nectar.
as functional jaws and it feeds as an adult on pollen grains, mainly from the flowers of Carex speci
as functional jaws and it feeds as an adult on pollen grains from a wide variety of plants such as A
as functional jaws and it feeds as an adult on pollen grains from a wide variety of flowers includin
ey bee flies back to the hive after collecting pollen.
Like other ice worms, it subsists on algae and pollen.
ned from the deposits, which have also yielded pollen records covering the same period.
self-pollinates, but the flowers also release pollen that reaches other plants as it floats away on
Meligethes aeneus is an abundant pollen beetle in the United Kingdom.
emporary with Lindow Man; however, analysis of pollen in the peat suggests there was some cultivatio
red from March to June, feeding and collecting pollen and nectar on early flowering plants, mainly o
t the cell plate during cytokinesis and during pollen development.
s is characterised by inaperturate and spinose pollen grains that are united in loose tetrahedral te
The main nectar source and main pollen source differ widely with the latitude, region
nd stock indices, sports scores and standings, pollen count, etc.
e stamens and petals, paracytic stomata, and a pollen morphology distinct from the genera of the sis
The male cones are 3-5 mm long, and release pollen in February/March; typically, cones of C. gove
to wide flowers with little nectar and copious pollen, which are more attractive to beetles.
Matthew Bivins, Ward Williams, and Christopher Pollen met and formed Jump, Little Children at the No
The male cones are 3-5 mm long, and release pollen in February-March.
llinated by bees because their anthers release pollen internally, and it must be shaken out by buzz
flow filtration (HAF), which filters any dust, pollen, airborne contaminants and resultant debris fr
al plants, artifacts, archeological materials, pollen, and photographs.
es in the Waterman Mountains of Arizona; these pollen core analyses indicate that this cactus specie
and thus requires a second grape variety as a pollen source for full fruit set.
and thus requires a second grape variety as a pollen source.
r life cycle as aeroplankton, often as spores, pollen, and wind-scattered seeds.
hey construct small cells containing a ball of pollen mixed with nectar, upon which an egg is laid,
elements were subsequently shown to be either pollen (including that of ragwort) and fungal spores
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.
of up to 250 small yellow stamens bearing the pollen.
mens tipped with purple anthers bearing yellow pollen.
ns tipped with large anthers bearing blue-gray pollen.
each holding a large anther bearing blue-gray pollen.
Bees collect pollen as a protein source to raise their brood.
Each plant receives a blend of pollen from a large number of individuals each having
m the seed of a Neoregelia carolinae bred with pollen from a Neoregelia oligantha.
ul white hairs in the center and bright purple pollen.
r in nature bee's work for honey by collecting pollen.
iphyophyllum peltatum) is supported by similar pollen and petiole structure.
can be distinguished from other genera by its pollen, and forms the Rhaponticum group of about 40 s
Liptinites were originally formed by spores, pollen, dinoflagellate cysts, leaf cuticles, and plan
lf-incompatible, flowers of one cactus require pollen from another individual of the species for fer
ces the number of nearby plants that can trade pollen and the likelihood of visits from common polli
characterizes most bees, and instead carry the pollen in their crop.
Each cell contains pollen and nectar, then one egg is laid inside a cell
h contain a brood cell, and once each cell has pollen and nectar for the larva to feed on - a small
American Chestnut male ( pollen) catkins
o mid green, fairly stout, and 4-7 cm long.The pollen is released early compared to other pines in t
Combs with pollen will tend to be in the first two combs nearest
mb to lay eggs, usually due to congestion from pollen or honey, the bee colony may be more prone to
ps to lure flies into the plant to contact its pollen.
Pre-Columbian Maize Agriculture in Costa Rica: Pollen and Other Evidence from Lake and Swamp Sedimen
Soldier beetle covered with pollen
the bottom leaves of the top, with creation of pollen and seeds happening in the same plant.
igher admixture of GM and non-GM crops through pollen movement.
rs during his marriage to former dancer Maggie Pollen.
On dry windy days, the pollen will travel many kilometers.
The plants are dioecious with pollen cones being solitary while those of female pla
Adrienne discovered that pollen gets carried in the air and can cause sneezing
es in these plastids cannot be disseminated by pollen.
eproduction, as the pollinator distributes its pollen.
he bees do not store honey, females do collect pollen which they store in the cells of their nests.
fields without actively hindering the drift of pollen.
Other energy sources include dust and pollen swept in from other regions.
er's ability to reduce tobacco smoke, dust and pollen particles in a room.
Sheep grazing in mustard fields were dusted by pollen from the blossom that turned their undersides
Often the forehead would be dusted with pollen of its favorite food, the Lobelia.
ancient lake sediments containing Early Eocene pollen, this age thus giving a minimum estimate for t
The examination of pollen and peat samples indicated that the plough cou
The larvae are fed on pollen, which like other bees, is carried on hairs of
Pinus and Abies), where the larvae feed on pollen or within buds, though larvae of a few species
such as Aedes aegypti, which may also feed on pollen, fruit juice, and other biological fluids.
They feed on pollen, copulate and oviposit within the flowers.
Adult Pyrophorus beetles feed on pollen and sometimes small insects, such as aphids or
above the timberline (2,200 meters) feeding on pollen of Helianthemum species.
e encountered from May through July feeding on pollen and nectar.
Theys are polyphagous, feeding on pollen and nectar of various herbaceous flowering pla
e encountered from May through July feeding on pollen and nectar, mainly on Asteraceae , Rosaceae, C
itors, especially Apiaceae species, feeding on pollen and the nectar.
here either the larval or adult stage feeds on pollen, but not both; there are other wasps which are
Females gather pollen and nectar as food from a variety of plants, a
In chalazogamous fertilization, the pollen tubes penetrate the ovule through the chalaza
Plants are sometimes fertilized with pollen from other Antennaria species, which may bring
ork led to the publication of the first modern pollen diagram in 1916, the same year that von Post p
few seeds by hand-pollinating the flowers with pollen from diploid, seeded bananas.
dvanced aroids with regards to its flowers and pollen structure.
Foliage and pollen cones
However, they must independently forage for pollen provisions and protect their nest and brood.
ed that position in the successive Fox, Vogel, Pollen and Atkinson ministries.
hods either to prevent GM crops from producing pollen at all, or to develop GM crops with pollen tha
It is a form taxon known only from fossil pollen.
It disappeared from the pollen record circa 1650 AD.
It is known only from fossilised pollen found in Eocene deposits of East Germany.
known from fossils of its flowers, fruits, and pollen.
Mercer, R. J. & Dimbleby, G. W., Pollen analysis and the hut circle settlement at Stan
separating them, on which genetically modified pollen can settle without fertilising non-GM crops.
fertilisation will occur only if any grains of pollen happen to have mutations that will suppress th
levels of carbon dioxide will greatly increase pollen production.
med to have sex in some form, and guessed that pollen was the male fertilizing agent, it was Camerar
s are located in the upper lip and have orange pollen.
t the plants in the non-GM field have received pollen from neighbouring GM fields.
The petals are under tension and hold loose pollen; when the flower is probed, the pollen is rele
illars are parasitic feeders of wax, honey and pollen.
from the study of a given sample of honey (and pollen) is useful when substantiating claims of a par
n pastoral New England is a valuable honey and pollen tree to 30 x 15 metres, which flowers during l
ich continues its development eating honey and pollen.
Honeybee collecting pollen
bee larva hatches it consumes the host larva's pollen ball, and, if the female cleptoparasite has no
humidity rises above 70 percent, however, the pollen tends to clump and is not so likely to become
a, which is atypical among bees; Hylaeus carry pollen in the crop, rather than externally, and regur
s, Eudicotyledonae has three apertures in each pollen.
eticulata was one of the species analyzed in a pollen core samplng study in northern Arizona, in whi
Two of the major allergens in the pollen of short ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) are
In the pollen of adult plants, the rate was even lower, rema
mm long, most likely to aid them in collecting pollen and nectar.
the habit of gathering floral oils instead of pollen for use as a larval food; this behavior is oth
2 June (in Ireland): Daniel Pollen, 9th premier of New Zealand.
This article is about pollen structure.
But what is a pollen source?
This kind of pollen barrier is often called a "buffer strip" or "b
esearched by members of the laboratory include pollen records and tree rings as a proxy for past cli
likely cleptoparasites, indicated by a lack of pollen collecting structures in their female morpholo
un-off after the end of the last deglaciation, pollen analysis performed as early as 1940 had alread
an unusual teal color with bright light orange pollen.
Main article: Pollen (novel)
Lady Oxford was born Mary Clare Pollen, the eldest of the five children of Francis An
re individual known in Tucson, and may require pollen from a different individual to produce fruit.
to the passion of Sir John Michael Hungerford Pollen, 7th Baronet of Redenham.
ground, and provisions are a soupy mixture of pollen and nectar in cells with a waxlike waterproof
resin as a reward, instead of the more common pollen or nectar (all three rewards are found in diff
However, the most efficient pollen barriers are made of non-GM crops of the same
ia japonica (Japanese cedar) - the most common pollen allergen in Japan; and P56 and P59, which shar
Is necessary for pollen elongation for pollen tube formation.
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.
ly frugivorous; it may also consume nectar 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).
tracted to the flowers which contain nectar or pollen, hence the plant is sometimes called the Bee N
Its diet primarily consists of nectar and pollen of Eucalypt blossoms, the pollination of which
rb-rich grassland where it feeds on nectar and pollen from a variety of flowers, especially ones tha
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
They also eat nectar and pollen.
Pollination in which nectar or pollen (food resources) are traded for pollen dispers
y the larval cells exclusively with nectar and pollen of ivy flowers (Hedera helix) (hence the Latin
ts of Africa, where it feeds on the nectar and pollen of flowers, but is popular in the exotic pet t
Common Blossom-bat feeds mostly on nectar and pollen rather than fruit.
ce - a situation where the incoming nectar and pollen nearly match the needed food for the hive, or
en the bumblebee is not foraging), nectar, and pollen.
d other insects that typically do not transfer pollen between individual plants), or possible protoc
Her first novel, The Pollen Room, was published in German in 1997 and has
t palaeoclimatic reconstructions obtained from pollen zones, marine and ice-core records, but these
The grape originated as a cross of Syrah pollen germinating a Peloursin plant.
ertures are very small spots on the walls of a pollen, where the wall is thinner and/or softer.
The removal of male ( pollen) parts of a plant, largely for controlled poll
is wife Henrietta, the eldest daughter of John Pollen.
Holst, the concept of using pollen to describe immigration of plant species and c
this time he developed the technique of using pollen grains to build stratigraphies that could be u
iginally non-GM plants, also catch a lot of GM pollen, produce a lot of GM fruit and are considered
s released large quantitites of characteristic pollen, which was trapped within the layers of peat p
If large amounts of GM pollen fertilise crops in a non-GM field, that harves
remove from the air at least 99.999% of dust, pollen, mold, bacteria and any airborne particles wit
Re-recordings of "The Pop Singer's Fear of the Pollen Count" and "Your Daddy's Car" were included, a
velop entirely from the genetic content of the pollen.
ost of Stockholm to learn his method of fossil pollen analysis .
items (in predatory wasps), or masses of mixed pollen and nectar (in bees); only rarely are other so
Dung often contains pollen which means fossilised dung middens can be use
hocolate, green tea, olive oil, argan oil, bee pollen and many grains are sources.
adults have working mandibles and feed on the pollen of a variety of flowers, especially those of C
teraceae and Crataegus species, feeding on the pollen.
n the flowers, mainly Apiaceae, feeding on the pollen.
However, the glue on the pollen packets does not set immediately, so the orchi
The adults feed on nectar, pollen and aphid honeydew but the larvae are active p
it on the male flowers, where they feed on the pollen.
Both adults and larvae feed on the pollen and nectar in the flowers.
F. halensis was described based on fossilised pollen from sediments in the Hale Basin of central Au
(CADR) numbers: one for tobacco smoke, one for pollen and one for dust.
taminate cones are entirely consumed; only the pollen is eaten from dried cones.
oligoleptic species, feeding its young only on pollen of a few species of Dipsacaceae (Knautia arven
he adult insects can fly and will feed only on pollen, honey and nectar to reproduce.
                                                                                                    


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