Birds, Bats, and Blooms: The Coevolution of
Birds, Bats, and Blooms: The Coevolution of Vertebrate Pollinators and Their Plants by Theodore H. Fleming
- Birds, Bats, and Blooms: The Coevolution of Vertebrate Pollinators and Their Plants
- Theodore H. Fleming
- Page: 254
- Format: pdf, ePub, mobi, fb2
- ISBN: 9780816553723
- Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Download books as pdf for free Birds, Bats, and Blooms: The Coevolution of Vertebrate Pollinators and Their Plants
Like gems flitting through the sky, hummingbirds attract our eye. But they are more than flash: they are critical pollinators in their ecosystems. Similarly in the darkness of night, nectar-feeding bats perform the same important ecological service as their colorful avian counterparts. Vertebrate pollinators like bats and birds are keystone species of the Sonoran Desert. Biologist Theodore H. Fleming uses these species—found in the desert around his home—to address two big questions dealing with the evolution of life on Earth: How did these animals evolve, and how did they coevolve with their food plants? A deeply thoughtful and researched dive into evolutionary history, Birds, Bats, and Blooms offers an engaging trip across evolutionary trajectories as it discusses nectar-feeding birds and bats and their coevolution as pollinators with flowering plants. The primary focus is on New World birds such as hummingbirds and their chiropteran counterparts (nectar-feeding bats in the family Phyllostomidae). It also discusses their Old World ecological counterparts, including sunbirds, honeyeaters, lorikeets, and nectar-feeding bats in the Pteropodidae family. Fleming also addresses the conservation status of these beautiful animals. Through engaging prose, Fleming pulls together the most recent research in evolutionary biology and pairs it with accounts of his personal interactions with bats and birds. His account includes fourteen color photographs taken by the author during his research trips around the world.
Pollination
wild, including more than 20,000 species of bees, some species of flies, butterflies, moths, wasps, beetles, thrips, birds, bats and other vertebrates. A few
Early steps of angiosperm–pollinator coevolution
The hypothesis that early flowering plants were insect-pollinated could be tested by an examination of the pollination biology of basal angiosperms and the
Study highlights importance of vertebrate pollinators
The importance of birds, mammals and reptiles pollinating plants around the world is the subject of a major new study led by the University
Without Birds, Lizards, and Other Vertebrate Pollinators
Bees tend to get the most attention as pollinators critical to the survival of plant species. But lizards, mice, bats, and other vertebrates
Bird pollination: Current Biology
Most nectarivorous birds are generalists and will often take nectar from bee-pollinated flowers. If there are fitness benefits of bird
Birds, Bats, and Blooms
The primary focus is on New World birds such as hummingbirds and their chiropteran counterparts (nectar-feeding bats in the family Phyllostomidae). It also
Insect pollination for most of angiosperm evolutionary history
Wind pollination evolved at least 42 times, with few reversals to animal pollination. Transitions between insect and vertebrate pollination were
Bird pollination
flowers of their nectar and pollen. What are the nectar properties Global importance of vertebrate pollinators for plant reproductive.
The Evolutionary Relationship between Your Garden and
Pollinators are great for our environment. Bees, butterflies, birds, bats, and bugs are what keep your plants alive and happy.
Birds, Bats, and Blooms - Project MUSE
A deeply thoughtful and researched dive into evolutionary history, Birds, Bats, and Blooms offers an engaging trip across evolutionary
0コメント