44 research outputs found
Do Queens of Bumblebee Species Differ In Their Choice Of Flower Colour Morphs Of Corydalis Cava (Fumariaceae)?
International audienceAbstractBumblebee queens require a continuous supply of flowering food plants from early spring for the successful development of annual colonies. Early in spring, Corydalis cava provides essential nectar and pollen resources and a choice of flower colour. In this paper, we examine flower colour choice (purple or white) in C. cava and verify the hypothesis that bumblebee queens differ in their choice of flower colour. A total of 10,615 observations of flower visits were made in spring 2011 and spring 2014 near Poznań, western Poland. Our results suggest that Bombus lucorum/cryptarum used purple flowers less, while Bombus terrestris used purple flowers more and Bombus hortorum showed no preference. Therefore, the colour morphs of C. cava are probably co-evolutionary adaptations to the development of another part of the insect community which has different colour preferences
Enhancement strategies for transdermal drug delivery systems: current trends and applications
Transdermal drug delivery systems have become an intriguing research topic in pharmaceutical technology area and one of the most frequently developed pharmaceutical products in global market. The use of these systems can overcome associated drawbacks of other delivery routes, such as oral and parenteral. The authors will review current trends, and future applications of transdermal technologies, with specific focus on providing a comprehensive understanding of transdermal drug delivery systems and enhancement strategies. This article will initially discuss each transdermal enhancement method used in the development of first-generation transdermal products. These methods include drug/vehicle interactions, vesicles and particles, stratum corneum modification, energy-driven methods and stratum corneum bypassing techniques. Through suitable design and implementation of active stratum corneum bypassing methods, notably microneedle technology, transdermal delivery systems have been shown to deliver both low and high molecular weight drugs. Microneedle technology platforms have proven themselves to be more versatile than other transdermal systems with opportunities for intradermal delivery of drugs/biotherapeutics and therapeutic drug monitoring. These have shown that microneedles have been a prospective strategy for improving transdermal delivery systems. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]</p
Microbes, mutualism, and range margins: testing the fitness consequences of soil microbial communities across and beyond a native plant's range
Sex-differential reproduction success and selection on floral traits in gynodioecious Salvia pratensis
Inbreeding depression in dioecious populations of the plant Mercurialis annua: comparisons between outcrossed progeny and the progeny of self-fertilized feminized males.
Inbreeding depression is a key factor in the maintenance of separate sexes in plants through selection for the avoidance of self-fertilization. However, very little is known about the levels of inbreeding depression in dioecious species, obviously because it is difficult to self-fertilize males or females. We overcame this problem by clonally propagating males from lineages in a dioecious metapopulation of the European annual plant Mercurialis annua, feminizing some of them and crossing the feminized with the unfeminized clones. Using this method, we compared the fitness of selfed vs outcrossed progeny under field conditions in Spain, where this species grows naturally. Multiplicative inbreeding depression (based on seed germination, early and late survival, seed mass and pollen viability) ranged from -0.69 to 0.82, with a mean close to zero. We consider possible explanations for both the low mean and high variance in inbreeding depression in M. annua, and we discuss the implications of our results for the maintenance of dioecy over hermaphroditism
Nectar sugar production across floral phases in the gynodioecious protandrous plant Geranium sylvaticum
Many zoophilous plants attract their pollinators by offering nectar as a reward. In gynodioecious plants (i.e. populations are
composed of female and hermaphrodite individuals) nectar production has been repeatedly reported to be larger in
hermaphrodite compared to female flowers even though nectar production across the different floral phases in
dichogamous plants (i.e. plants with time separation of pollen dispersal and stigma receptivity) has rarely been examined. In
this study, sugar production in nectar standing crop and secretion rate were investigated in Geranium sylvaticum,
a gynodioecious plant species with protandry (i.e. with hermaphrodite flowers releasing their pollen before the stigma is
receptive). We found that flowers from hermaphrodites produced more nectar than female flowers in terms of total nectar
sugar content. In addition, differences in nectar production among floral phases were found in hermaphrodite flowers but
not in female flowers. In hermaphrodite flowers, maximum sugar content coincided with pollen presentation and declined
slightly towards the female phase, indicating nectar reabsorption, whereas in female flowers sugar content did not differ
between the floral phases. These differences in floral reward are discussed in relation to visitation patterns by pollinators
and seed production in this species.peerReviewe
