「Pollination」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Pollination

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  • Examples include cleaner fish, pollination and seed dispersal, gut flora and nitrogen
  • The museum also focuses on issues such as pollination and the development of apple trees.
  • n) parts of a plant, largely for controlled pollination and breeding purposes, is also called emasc
  • f insects that perform valued services like pollination and pest control.
  • broad, maturing pale brown 5-7 months after pollination, and have stiff, rounded to bluntly pointed
  • rs commenced an intensive programme of hand pollination and seed collection of the remaining cultiv
  • young, maturing dark brown 5-7 months after pollination, and have stiff, smoothly rounded scales.
  • re from grape seeds which are the result of pollination and sexual propagation and thus more likely
  • s sold commercially for use in orchard crop pollination, and which can be attracted to nest in wood
  • phytophagy and by plant propagation through pollination and seed dispersal.:3
  • Good examples of gonochoric or dioecious pollination are hollies, and kiwifruit.
  • Among the olive cultivars used for pollination are the Bouteillan, Leccino, Lucques, Manza
  • rently being used as pollinators in managed pollination are honey bees, bumblebees, alfalfa leafcut
  • cus aculeatus) certainly does not need buzz pollination, as pollen grains are large, sticky and fre
  • cies, and again is not a candidate for buzz pollination, as pollen is freely dispensed.
  • The stalk does seem to play a role in pollination as plants without a stalk produced only hal
  • ion of roses through artificial, controlled pollination began with Josephine's horticulturalist And
  • is reproductively isolated from that by its pollination being a month to two months later in summer
  • This independence of the need for pollination between individuals is one reason why this
  • eekeepers and the growers who need bees for pollination billions of dollars in losses.
  • Information of pollination biology exists only for Erysimum baeticum b
  • from Durham University and also studied the pollination biology of the genus Primula for his PhD at
  • The emergent habit permits pollination by wind or by flying insects.
  • s such as cucurbits, which may exhibit poor pollination by fruit abortion, fruit deformity or poor
  • pose of these trichomes is; protection from pollination by way of "crawlers" (ants and other insect
  • face until they reach a female flower where pollination can occur.
  • m Pheromone in Order to Attract Hornets for Pollination, Current Biology, Volume 19, Issue 16, 1368
  • Berlin 1793), he was one of the founders of pollination ecology as a scientific discipline.
  • The Principles of Pollination Ecology.
  • r Blumen in Berlin, pioneering the study of pollination ecology.
  • vely at the apex at maturity one year after pollination, ejecting the two shiny black seeds up to 1
  • Type of pollination: entomophilous
  • After pollination, figs ripen quickly.
  • e the pollen; others are dependent on cross pollination from a genetically different source of viab
  • 4 when a suitable method of mass controlled pollination had been devised .
  • Pollination has been attributed both to insects and win
  • Traditionally pollination has been done by shaking using electric vib
  • iness Southern Exposure Seed Exchange (open pollination, heirloom and traditional varieties ) and p
  • Hagerup, O. (1932) On Pollination in the extremely hot air at Timbuctu.
  • ch occurs only in Mexico, obviating natural pollination in other countries.
  • Pollination in which nectar or pollen (food resources)
  • Pollination is by evening- or night-flying insects.
  • Hand pollination is used with date palms to avoid wasting a
  • Pollination is performed by insects, usually by a scent
  • Pollination is in late spring, with the cones maturing
  • When pollination is needed on a large scale, such as for fie
  • As in most sedges, pollination is by wind, not insects, and the mature fru
  • duced by insecticides aimed at other pests, pollination is inhibited and crops don't appear.
  • Hand pollination is only an option on a small scale, but is
  • lous, yellowish in colour and 5-10 cm long; pollination is in early spring, before the leaves emerg
  • , and produced in clusters of two to seven; pollination is in early spring, before the leaves emerg
  • ic flowers which are small and scented, and pollination is therefore thought to be achieved by inse
  • The primary reason for hand pollination is lack of pollinators which may be due to
  • To ensure pollination it must be co-planted with another grape va
  • see pollination management
  • Forage is also significant for pollination management with other bee species.
  • nk corollas and golden anthers which, after pollination, mature into bright to dull red berrylike f
  • be a large grower and probably had all the pollination needed.
  • Pollinator decline or the concentrated pollination needs of monoculture may also be factors in
  • Cones mature and pollination occurs in March to June, with seeds ripenin
  • , Sprengel did considerable research on the pollination of plants and the interaction between flowe
  • It is unknown if it contributes to the pollination of the crop.
  • Bombus polaris has a major part in the pollination of vegetation in the Arctic.
  • Some of his early papers were about the pollination of certain species.
  • ed by the male sawfly in similar way to the pollination of Drakaea (the hammer Orchid).
  • nectar and pollen of Eucalypt blossoms, the pollination of which it is largely responsible.
  • eiton neighbor, and gamein to marry) is the pollination of a flower with the pollen from another fl
  • he United Kingdom between 1885 and 1906 for pollination of red clover.
  • ction is proof of the versatility and cross pollination of reggae and how widespread its influence
  • flowers and they seem to play a part in the pollination of certain plants.
  • hought to contribute very little toward the pollination of its host plant.
  • ly Graham crusade which resulted in a cross pollination of religious ideals from the United States
  • aspects of its life history, reproduction, pollination, population biology, fire ecology, genetics
  • developed in the Italy in the 1979s by open pollination PRI 2059-101 apples.
  • rsity fruit nutritionist who conducted open pollination research on his various orchards.
  • Beekeepers provide pollination services to horticulturists, which generate
  • y species are nectar robbers, performing no pollination services to a plant while still consuming n
  • Main article: Pollination syndrome
  • Plants fall into pollination syndromes that reflect the type of pollinat
  • r interactions, an uncritical acceptance of pollination syndromes as providing a framework for clas
  • With controlled pollination, the appearance of new cultivars grew expon
  • After pollination, the flower stem coils both directions, sta
  • When managed for pollination, the females are induced to nest in drinkin
  • During pollination, this generative cell divides and gives ris
  • ate herbicide) could be transmitted by wind pollination to resident plants of different Agrostis sp
  • termine the effectiveness of putative plant pollination vectors.
  • e mosquito spraying, the supply of bees for pollination was critically short for several years.
  • called ecology, and provided evidence that pollination was an organised process in which insects a
  • However, this may necessitate hand pollination when bloom starts.
  • It is thought that it resulted from random pollination when European Vitis vinifera grapes were at
  • ugust and September (about 40-60 days after pollination), when the valves of the dehiscent fruits (
  • Entomophily is a form of pollination whereby pollen is distributed by insects, p
  • Pollination, which is typically very specialized in thi
  • e first to discover a method for artificial pollination, which made it possible to cultivate vanill