Obligate nursery pollination mutualisms such as the fig–fig wasp system, with their central plant–pollinator mutualism associated with non-pollinating satellite wasp species, can function as closed system microcosms representative of tritrophic communities. In this system, enclosed inflorescences (syconia) function as sites of seed production, as well as brood-sites for the progeny of herbivorous mutualistic pollinators, non-pollinating gallers and parasitoids of the two. Plant reproductive traits such as inflorescence size (syconium volume) and within-plant phenology (within-tree asynchrony) as can affect inter-species relationships among the three trophic levels in such plant–herbivore–parasitoid systems. Induced or natural variations in ...
Fig trees (Ficus, Moraceae) and their pollinating wasps (Chalcidoidea, Agaonidae) are involved in an...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Within-tree flowering asynchrony in figs, which may allow pollinating wasps to avoid the risks of di...
1. Plant reproductive phenology is generally viewed as an individual's strategy to maximize gamete e...
Plants, herbivores and parasitoids affect each other directly and indirectly; however, feedback effe...
In a nursery pollination mutualism, we asked whether environmental factors affected reproduction of ...
Differential occupancy of space can lead to species coexistence. The fig-fig wasp pollination system...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Mutualistic associations are prone to exploitation by 'exploitative species'. The fig tree Ficus syc...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
It is generally believed that physical heterogeneity in common resource or evolutionary restraint ca...
1. Fig trees (Ficus) are pollinated only by agaonid wasps, whose larvae also gall fig ovules. Each o...
1. Fig trees (Ficus) are pollinated only by agaonid wasps, whose larvae also gall fig ovules. Each o...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Partners in mutalisms often have conflicting evolutionary goals. I examined the nature and consequen...
Fig trees (Ficus, Moraceae) and their pollinating wasps (Chalcidoidea, Agaonidae) are involved in an...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Within-tree flowering asynchrony in figs, which may allow pollinating wasps to avoid the risks of di...
1. Plant reproductive phenology is generally viewed as an individual's strategy to maximize gamete e...
Plants, herbivores and parasitoids affect each other directly and indirectly; however, feedback effe...
In a nursery pollination mutualism, we asked whether environmental factors affected reproduction of ...
Differential occupancy of space can lead to species coexistence. The fig-fig wasp pollination system...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Mutualistic associations are prone to exploitation by 'exploitative species'. The fig tree Ficus syc...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
It is generally believed that physical heterogeneity in common resource or evolutionary restraint ca...
1. Fig trees (Ficus) are pollinated only by agaonid wasps, whose larvae also gall fig ovules. Each o...
1. Fig trees (Ficus) are pollinated only by agaonid wasps, whose larvae also gall fig ovules. Each o...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Partners in mutalisms often have conflicting evolutionary goals. I examined the nature and consequen...
Fig trees (Ficus, Moraceae) and their pollinating wasps (Chalcidoidea, Agaonidae) are involved in an...
Fig trees are pollinated by fig wasps, which also oviposit in female flowers. The wasp larvae gall a...
Within-tree flowering asynchrony in figs, which may allow pollinating wasps to avoid the risks of di...