Hawkmoth pollination of Mirabilis longiflora (Nyctaginaceae)
AUTOR(ES)
Grant, Verne
RESUMO
A guild composed of very-long-tubed hawkmoth flowers (nectar tubes, 9 cm or more long), belonging to different genera and families, occurs in the American Southwest. Our knowledge of the hawkmoth associates of these flowers is fragmentary. Mirabilis longiflora, a member of the guild with a tube 10.0-10.5 cm long, was found to be visited and pollinated mainly by Manduca quinquemaculata with a proboscis 10.7-11.6 cm long in the Chiricahua Mountains of southeastern Arizona. This example fits in with four other previously reported cases. The long-tongued Man. quinquemaculata is now known to be associated with five species of very long-tongued hawkmoth flowers in the Southwest, and Man. rustica has been found on one of them.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=393583Documentos Relacionados
- New flavone from the leaves of Neea theifera (Nyctaginaceae)
- Reações estruturais, histoquímicas e fotossintéticas de Guapira opposita (Vell.) Reitz (Nyctaginaceae) à Cecidomyiidae galhadores
- Comparative study on morpho-anatomy of leaf, stem and root of Boerhaavia diffusa L. (Nyctaginaceae) and its adulterant plants
- Description of a new species of Bruggmannia Tavares (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) associated with Guapira opposita (Vell.) Reitz (Nyctaginaceae) from Brazil
- Bruggmannia chapadensis sp. nov. (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), a new midge inducing galls on Guapira pernambucensis (Nyctaginaceae) from the Parque Nacional da Chapada dos Guimarães, Mato Grosso State, Brazil