4.0 Article

ExTRAFlORAl NECTARIES IN NEpHEliuM lAppAcEuM (SApINDACEAE)

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Review Plant Sciences

Diversity and evolution of secretory structures in Sapindales

Elisabeth Dantas Tolke et al.

Summary: Sapindales consists of nine families primarily located in tropical regions, with species of high economic importance known for producing medicinal chemical constituents. Anatomical and analytical chemistry studies have made significant progress in further understanding the secretory structures of Sapindales, which include a variety of glands such as ducts, cavities, laticifers, nectaries, and trichomes. The diversity of chemical compounds in this order is attributed to these secretory structures, which play a fundamental role in functional and evolutionary aspects within Sapindales.

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY (2022)

Editorial Material Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

How ants shape biodiversity

Joseph Parker et al.

CURRENT BIOLOGY (2021)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

The use of extrafloral nectar in pest management: overcoming context dependence

Ian Matthew Jones et al.

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY (2017)

Article Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Structure and histology of extrafloral nectaries of tropical species in a mexican rain forest

Dulce Rodríguez-Morales et al.

Bioscience Journal (2016)

Article Biology

Macroevolutionary assembly of ant/plant symbioses: Pseudomyrmex ants and their ant-housing plants in the Neotropics

Guillaume Chomicki et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (2015)

Article Plant Sciences

Extrafloral-nectar-based partner manipulation in plant-ant relationships

D. A. Grasso et al.

AOB PLANTS (2015)

Article Plant Sciences

The phylogenetic distribution of extrafloral nectaries in plants

Marjorie G. Weber et al.

ANNALS OF BOTANY (2013)

Article Plant Sciences

Anti-herbivory defense of two Vicia species with and without extrafloral nectaries

Noboru Katayama et al.

PLANT ECOLOGY (2011)

Article Entomology

New record of predatory ladybird beetle (Coleoptera, Coccinellidae) feeding on extrafloral nectaries

Lucia M. Almeida et al.

REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE ENTOMOLOGIA (2011)

Review Plant Sciences

Indirect defence via tritrophic interactions

Martin Heil

NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2008)