Publications by authors named "G Davidowitz"

Article Synopsis
  • Primary nectar-robbers create multiple holes in flowers, bypassing reproductive organs, which raises questions about why robbed flowers continue to attract foragers despite signaling low nectar availability.
  • Three hypotheses were tested regarding this behavior, with findings showing that multiple holes appeared in flowers even before all had been robbed, and that foragers return to previously robbed flowers days later.
  • The study concluded that older flowers provide more nectar value than younger ones, explaining why bees prefer to rob older, previously damaged flowers, thus revealing patterns in nectar-robbing activity.
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Climate-induced shifts in flowering phenology can disrupt pollinator-floral resource synchrony, especially in desert ecosystems where rainfall dictates both. However, baseline metrics to gauge pollinator health in the wild amidst rapid climate change are lacking. Our laboratory-based study establishes a baseline for pollinator physiological state by exploring how osmotic conditions influence survivorship in a desert hawkmoth pollinator, Manduca sexta.

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Water regulation is an important physiological challenge for insects due to their small body sizes and large surface area to volume ratios. Adaptations for decreasing cuticular water loss, the largest avenue of loss, are especially important. The melanin desiccation hypothesis states that melanin molecules in the cuticle may help prevent water loss, thus offering protection from desiccation.

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In nectivorous pollinators, timing and pattern of allocation of consumed nectar affects fitness traits and foraging behavior. Differences in male and female behaviors can influence these allocation strategies. These physiological patterns are not well studied in Lepidoptera, despite them being important pollinators.

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Understanding the evolution of adaptive plasticity is fundamental to our knowledge of how organisms interact with their environments and cope with environmental change. Plasticity in melanin pigmentation is common in response to variable environments, especially thermal environments. Yet, the adaptive significance of melanin plasticity in thermally variable environments is often assumed, but rarely explicitly tested.

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