2014
DOI: 10.1007/s40415-014-0114-x
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Role of pollen production in mating success in some tropical tree species

Abstract: This study was conducted to estimate the amount of pollen produced by three entomophilous and two ornithophilous tropical woody taxa. It seeks to establish their reproductive success in relation to each other and contribution to the concentration of pollen in the air. The taxa selected were Bombax ceiba, Erythrina stricta (both ornithophilous), Lagerstroemia speciosa, Mesua ferrea and Schima wallichii (all entomophilous); which were studied in three different calendar years (2010, 2011 and 2012). M. ferrea pro… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…The high fruit and seed sets in B. ceiba may be due to the availability of high pollen and pollinator resources. The productions of pollen grains per flower and per tree in B. ceiba are very high compared to that of other bird-pollinated species such as Erythrina stricta (Khanduri et al 2015), Gmelina arborea, and Firmiana colorata (Kumar 2016). The existence of competition for other floral resources among the birds in the study locations was minimal, as the birds confined their visits only to the flowers of B. ceiba.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…The high fruit and seed sets in B. ceiba may be due to the availability of high pollen and pollinator resources. The productions of pollen grains per flower and per tree in B. ceiba are very high compared to that of other bird-pollinated species such as Erythrina stricta (Khanduri et al 2015), Gmelina arborea, and Firmiana colorata (Kumar 2016). The existence of competition for other floral resources among the birds in the study locations was minimal, as the birds confined their visits only to the flowers of B. ceiba.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…: 5 % (Etcheverry et al 2012), Erythrina stricta Roxb. : 4.48-39.12 % (Khanduri et al 2015), and outcrossed species, i.e., Tectona grandis Linn. f.:.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…found to be an important pollinator on the basis of its visitation frequency and rate. Flower size (large for L. speciosa and moderate for S. wallichii) along with large number of anthers per flower, copious pollen production (Khanduri et al, 2015) and morphological fitness of Xylocopa bee to the flowers (Khanduri, 2014) were the characteristic features of both 260 species to be adapted to pollination by Xylocopa bee. Although Xylocopa bees spent less time per flower while foraging than other species, they made frequent inter-flower and inter-tree movements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flower and pollen production along with ovule number per flower was assessed by choosing ten trees each of five investigated tree species as per the method of Khanduri et al (2015). The ovule number per tree for each analysed species was calculated by multiplying the ovule number per flower with number of flowers per tree.…”
Section: Flower Pollen and Seed Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The complete development of floral characters along with the rate of pollen production in tree species is helpful in understanding the detailed pollination mechanism and barriers in pollination biology (Etcheverry et al, 2008;. Furthermore, the quantity of pollen production is important to (i) determine the amount of genes a population can spread (Liu et al, 2015), (ii) establish an airborne pollen forecasting (Voukantsis et al, 2010;Csépe, 2020), (iii) assess the relative density of atmospheric pollen grains of every species in a forest ecosystem (Charalampopoulos et al, 2013), (iv) predict production of seeds in a reproductive season (Allison, 1991), (v) determine the availability of pollen for pollinators to achieve pollination success (Mu et al, 2017;Khanduri et al, 2015;Sukumaran et al, 2020), and (vi) assess genetic homogeneity of a population through ample pollen exchange among individuals (Dufaÿ et al, 2008;Ramos et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%