4 results match your criteria: "Indiana University Herbarium[Affiliation]"

Pollination efficiency and the pollen-ovule ratio.

New Phytol

August 2024

Indiana University Herbarium, East Tenth Street, Bloomington, IN, 47408, USA.

Pollination presents a risky journey for pollen grains. Pollen loss is sometimes thought to favour greater pollen investment to compensate for the inefficiency of transport. Sex allocation theory, to the contrary, has consistently concluded that postdispersal loss should have no selective effect on investment in either sex function.

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Why the Shaw-Mohler equation works and when it doesn't.

Biol Lett

February 2024

Department of Biology, Indiana University Herbarium, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA.

Fitness gain curves were introduced into the framework of the Shaw-Mohler equation, the foundation of sex allocation theory. I return to the Shaw-Mohler equation to consider how it embodies the rare-sex advantage underlying frequency-dependent selection on the sex ratio. The Shaw-Mohler formulation is based on the numbers of males and females randomly mating in a panmictic population.

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Understanding the origins of flower colour signalling to pollinators is fundamental to evolutionary biology and ecology. Flower colour evolves under pressure from visual systems of pollinators, like birds and insects, to establish global signatures among flowers with similar pollinators. However, an understanding of the ancient origins of this relationship remains elusive.

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