Invasive plants threaten biodiversity worldwide and effective management must control the target invader while conserving biodiversity. Herbicide is often used to control invasive plants, but potential negative impacts on biodiversity have led to spot spraying being recommended over boom spraying to minimize the exposure of nontarget species to chemicals. We examined the influence of herbicide application methods on off-target plant communities in threatened temperate grasslands of southeastern Australia, where spraying with the broadleaf herbicide fluroxypr is commonly used to control St.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCovering: up to September 2022Orchids are renowned not only for their diversity of floral forms, but also for their many and often highly specialised pollination strategies. Volatile semiochemicals play a crucial role in the attraction of a wide variety of insect pollinators of orchids. The compounds produced by orchid flowers are as diverse as the pollinators they attract, and here we summarise some of the chemical diversity found across orchid taxa and pollination strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCross-kingdom mimicry of female insect sex pheromones by sexually deceptive orchids has evolved multiple times. Fungus gnats (Diptera) are predicted to be pollinators of hundreds of sexually deceptive orchids, yet unlike orchids that sexually attract bees and wasps (Hymenoptera), the chemistry of fungus gnat-pollinated orchids remains unknown. Furthermore, despite the importance of fungus gnats as pollinators, pests, and decomposers of organic material, and evidence for sex pheromones since 1971, no structure of any fungus gnat sex pheromone has to date been confirmed.
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