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21.
In central Chile, nectar robbing of Puya coerulea (Bromeliaceae) flowers by the austral blackbird, Curaeus curaeus, had a direct impact on the plant via removal of floral resources and, in some cases, damage or even destruction of flowers. These robbing visits also likely had an indirect impact on plant fitness due to the decreased rate of legitimate visits by the hummingbird Patagona gigas to inflorescences with many robbed flowers. The proportion of flowers within an inflorescence visited by P. gigas was inversely proportional to the ratio of robbed flowers. 相似文献
22.
While in most Salvia species pollen is transferred by the `staminal lever mechanism', in some species the `levers' are inactive. This is also
found in the bird pollinated S. haenkei from Bolivia. To understand pollen transfer in a species lacking the lever mechanism we carried out field investigations
and confirmed our observations by means of morphometric measurements of both the flowers and museum skins of the observed
hummingbird species. The tubular corolla forces the birds (Sappho sparganura, Colibri coruscans, Patagona gigas, Oreotrochilus adela) into a specific position thereby causing pollen transfer from the exserted pollen-sacs to the bird's feathers and bills.
The staminal levers are well developed but cannot be moved because the sterile arms are closely attached to the upper face
of the corolla leaving no space for any movement. We assume that the reduction of the lever mechanism reflects an adaptation
to bird pollination. 相似文献
23.
The hummingbird beak, specialized for feeding on floral nectars, is also uniquely adapted to eating flying insects. During insect capture the beak often appears to close at a rate that cannot be explained by direct muscular action alone. Here we show that the lower jaw of hummingbirds has a shape and compliance that allows for a controlled elastic snap. Furthermore, hummingbirds have the musculature needed to independently bend and twist the sides of the lower jaw. According to both our simple physical model and our elastic instability calculation, the jaw can be smoothly opened and then snapped closed through an appropriate sequence of bending and twisting actions by the muscles of the lower jaw. 相似文献
24.
Christopher J. Clark Jimmy A. McGuire Elisa Bonaccorso Jacob S. Berv Richard O. Prum 《Evolution; international journal of organic evolution》2018,72(3):630-646
Phenotypic characters with a complex physical basis may have a correspondingly complex evolutionary history. Males in the “bee” hummingbird clade court females with sound from tail‐feathers, which flutter during display dives. On a phylogeny of 35 species, flutter sound frequency evolves as a gradual, continuous character on most branches. But on at least six internal branches fall two types of major, saltational changes: mode of flutter changes, or the feather that is the sound source changes, causing frequency to jump from one discrete value to another. In addition to their tail “instruments,” males also court females with sound from their syrinx and wing feathers, and may transfer or switch instruments over evolutionary time. In support of this, we found a negative phylogenetic correlation between presence of wing trills and singing. We hypothesize this transference occurs because wing trills and vocal songs serve similar functions and are thus redundant. There are also three independent origins of self‐convergence of multiple signals, in which the same species produces both a vocal (sung) frequency sweep, and a highly similar nonvocal sound. Moreover, production of vocal, learned song has been lost repeatedly. Male bee hummingbirds court females with a diverse, coevolving array of acoustic traits. 相似文献
25.
A near-complete, partially articulated skeleton of a hummingbird was recently found in the menilite shales of the Polish Flysh
Carpathians. The specimen is dated to the Early Oligocene (Rupelian, approx. 31 Myr). It shares derived characters with extant
hummingbirds and plesiomorphic characters with swifts. Its long, thin beak and short and stout humerus and ulna are typical
for hummingbirds, but the coracoid resembles that observed in swifts. The osteology of the specimen is generally similar to
that of the hummingbird described from the Early Tertiary of Germany but because it clearly differs in some characters from
the German hummingbird Eurotrochilus inexpectatus, it is described as a new species of the same genus. 相似文献
26.
Florivory and floral larceny by fly larvae decrease nectar availability and hummingbird foraging visits at Heliconia (Heliconiaceae) flowers 下载免费PDF全文
Insect larvae inhabit the corolla tubes of some Heliconia species (Heliconiaceae). In this study, we present the first evidence of the influence of these larvae on the pollination ecology of Heliconia plants. We provide experimental evidence that the flowers of Heliconia spathocircinata infested by flies have less nectar for pollinators and received fewer visits by hummingbird pollinators, in comparison with uninfested flowers. 相似文献
27.
T. Ryan Gregory Chandler B. Andrews Jimmy A. McGuire Christopher C. Witt 《Proceedings. Biological sciences / The Royal Society》2009,276(1674):3753-3757
It has often been suggested that the genome sizes of birds are constrained relative to other tetrapods owing to the high metabolic demands of powered flight and the link between nuclear DNA content and red blood cell size. This hypothesis predicts that hummingbirds, which engage in energy-intensive hovering flight, will display especially constrained genomes even relative to other birds. We report genome size measurements for 37 species of hummingbirds that confirm this prediction. Our results suggest that genome size was reduced before the divergence of extant hummingbird lineages, and that only minimal additional reduction occurred during hummingbird diversification. Unlike in some other avian taxa, the small amount of variation observed within hummingbirds is not explained by variation in respiratory and flight-related parameters. Unexpectedly, genome size appears to have increased in four unrelated hummingbird species whose distributions are centred on humid forests of the upper-tropical elevational zone on the eastern slope of the Andes. This suggests that the secondary expansion of the genome may have been mediated by biogeographical and demographic effects. 相似文献
28.
Pollen of 361 species from 71 genera of Cactaceae was investigated for this study of the correlation between pollen colour and the pollination syndrome. 11% of all species studied had red or brown pollen, and nearly all of these species were ornithophilous. This suggests that pollen colour probably is part of the bird-flower syndrome of Cactaceae. Possibly the red or brown pollen might be a crypto-mimetic adaptation to the dark coloured bill of the pollinating hummingbird (Trochilidae) and secures safe transport to a receptive stigma without being removed by the bird immediately. The results are discussed against a background of studies encompassing about 900 species from 77 families, which provide further evidence for the proposed adaptive significance of palynological characters. 相似文献
29.
ABSTRACT. In tropical ecosystems, birds play a relevant role in plant reproduction. Although hummingbirds are regarded as the most important vertebrate pollinators in the Neotropics, the possible role of perching birds as pollinators has been neglected. From 2003 to 2005, we observed 68 species of plants visited by birds in an Atlantic rainforest in southeastern Brazil, including three canopy species: Spirotheca rivieri (Malvaceae, Bombacoidea), Schwartzia brasiliensis (Marcgraviaceae), and Psittacanthus dichrous (Loranthaceae). Flowers of these three species were visited by 15 different species of perching birds and by hummingbirds. The flowers of these three plants are colorful, ranging from deep red or purple to orange. Spirotheca rivieri blooms during the austral winter and Schwartzia brasiliensis during the summer. The flowers of these two species produce copious amounts of dilute nectar in easily accessible structures and both species appear to depend primarily on perching birds as pollinators, with hummingbirds being secondary or minor pollen vectors. The tubular, narrow flowers of P. dichrous are produced during the austral summer and are visited primarily by hummingbirds. Perching birds also visit the flowers, but destroy them. Our results suggest that previous estimates of the number of perching birds that feed on nectar may be too low and that flowers pollinated by perching birds may be more common in the canopy of Neotropical forests than previously thought. 相似文献
30.
Citharexylum myrianthum is an example of cryptic dioecy in morphologically perfect flowers. Flowers are small, tubular, white-colored, and crepuscular, with a sweet, pleasant scent and occur in raceme-like inflorescences. Functionally, male flowers have a less developed ovary and females have anthers lacking pollen. They are pollinated by five species of Sphingidae. The low fruit set under natural conditions, compared with the very high fruit set after hand-pollination, apart from other possible factors, suggests that pollen flow is limited mainly by pollinators. The overabundance of nectar provided by C. myrianthum flowers attracts a large number of opportunistic nectar foragers in the morning. Hummingbirds, the most frequent visitors, are nectar thieves and display territorialism, being aggressive even to Passeriformes. Despite its visitor diversity C. myrianthum is pollinated by sphingids, and in this sense this species is a specialist rather than a generalist. 相似文献