<p><p>This volume explores a collection of experimental techniques used to investigate different aspects of pollen development and function, including its role in reaching the ovule and delivering the two sperm cells. The techniques discussed range from basic methodology to cultivate pollen in vitro
Pollen and Pollination
β Scribed by M. Hesse (auth.), Prof. Dr. Amots Dafni, Prof. Dr. Michael Hesse, Prof. Dr. Ettore Pacini (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Wien
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 338
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Pollen studies make important contributions nature, into three main themes: pollen strucΒ to our knowledge in many interdisciplinary ture and constituents, pollen evolutionary arenas. Pollen identification is widely used in ecology and the pollen-pollinator interface. reconstruction of, e.g., vegetation, the climate Several papers overlap somewhat or are of the past, and plant biodiversity. Studies perhaps even somewhat contradictory and concerning pollen structure, size and form are reflect the author's own ideas and experience. key issues in basic sciences, as, e.g., plant Some could be understood more deeply by taxonomy and evolution, but are also of consulting other closely related articles. The importance in applied fields as, e.g., plant reader is strongly referred to the respective breeding. In pollination studies pollen is literature list of each article. generally used specifically to identify food ofanther ripening and pollen The last steps development (Pacini) and the mature pollen sources of visitors and to reconstruct their foraging routes. Fewer have been devoted to wall structure (Hesse) are key factors to pollen collection mechanisms and to the strucΒ understand pollen dispersal mechanisms in ture and content of pollen in relation to its biotic pollination (Stroo) as well as abiotic pollination (Ackerman). Pollen size, shape, function.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-IX
Pollen wall stratification and pollination....Pages 1-17
From anther and pollen ripening to pollen presentation....Pages 19-43
Cytochemistry of mature angiosperm pollen....Pages 45-62
The ecology and evolution of pollen odors....Pages 63-87
The ecology and evolution of visual pollen signals....Pages 89-111
Pollen viability and longevity: practical, ecological and evolutionary implications....Pages 113-132
The role of electrostatic forces in pollination....Pages 133-142
Pollen grains: why so many?....Pages 143-165
Abiotic pollen and pollination: ecological, functional, and evolutionary perspectives....Pages 167-185
Pollen nutritional content and digestibility for animals....Pages 187-209
The collection of pollen by bees....Pages 211-223
Pollen morphological evolution in bat pollinated plants....Pages 225-242
The structure and function of orchid pollinaria....Pages 243-269
Deceptive orchids with meliponini as pollinators....Pages 271-279
Thread-forming structures in angiosperm anthers: their diverse role in pollination ecology....Pages 281-292
Convergent Evolution and Adaptive Radiation of Beetle-Pollinated Angiosperms....Pages 293-320
Back Matter....Pages 321-341
β¦ Subjects
Plant Sciences
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