4 results match your criteria: "Graduate School of Agricultural Science Tohoku University Osaki Japan.[Affiliation]"
Wood decay fungi alter the abiotic and biotic properties of deadwood, which are important as nurse logs for seedling regeneration. However, the relationship between fungal decay type and seedling performance has not been evaluated experimentally. In this study, we examined the germination, growth, and survival of six arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and six ectomycorrhizal (ECM) tree species on three substrates (pine logs with brown and white rot and soil) by conducting seed-sowing experiments in a mixed forest dominated by and .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe genus in basal Araceae includes both thermogenic and non/slightly thermogenic species that prefer cold environments. If floral thermogenesis of contributes to cold adaptation, it would be expected that thermogenic species have a larger habitat than non/slightly thermogenic species during an ice age, leading to increased genetic diversity in the current population. To address this question, potential distribution in past environment predicted by ecological niche modeling (ENM), genetic diversity, and population structure of chloroplast and genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms were compared between thermogenic and non/slightly thermogenic .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeographic differences in floral traits may reflect geographic differences in effective pollinator assemblages. Independent local adaptation to pollinator assemblages in multiple regions would be expected to cause parallel floral trait evolution, although sufficient evidence for this is still lacking. Knowing the intraspecific evolutionary history of floral traits will reveal events that occur in the early stages of trait diversification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
January 2019
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science Kyushu University Fukuoka Japan.
The color and patterns of animal-pollinated flowers are known to have effects on pollinator attraction. In this study, the relative importance of flower color and color contrast patterns on pollinator attraction was examined in two pollinator groups, swallowtail butterflies and hawkmoths using two species; butterfly-pollinated and hawkmoth-pollinated having reddish and yellowish flowers in human vision, respectively. Flowers of both species have UV bullseye patterns, composed of UV-absorbing centers and UV-reflecting peripheries, known to function as a typical nectar guide, but UV reflectance was significantly more intense in the peripheries of flowers than in those of flowers.
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