Mostrando 2 resultados de: 2
Abundance drives broad patterns of generalisation in plant–hummingbird pollination networks
ArticleAbstract: Abundant pollinators are often more generalised than rare pollinators. This could be because abundanPalabras claves:mutualism, Mutualistic networks, plant–animal interactions, specialisationAutores:Boris A. Tinoco, Cotton P.A., Dalsgaard B., Dicks L.V., Lara C., Maglianesi M.A., Marin-Gómez O.H., Martín González A.M., Maruyama P.K., Ortiz-Pulido R., Rahbek C., Rocca M.A., Rodrigues L.C., Rosero-Lasprilla L., Sazima M., Simmons B.I., Sonne J., Sutherland W.J., Vasconcelos M.F., Vizentin-Bugoni J.Fuentes:googlescopusEcological mechanisms explaining interactions within plant-hummingbird networks: Morphological matching increases towards lower latitudes
ArticleAbstract: Interactions between species are influenced by different ecological mechanisms, such as morphologicaPalabras claves:Abundances, Forbidden links, Modularity, phenology, pollination, resource specializationAutores:Araujo A.C., Boris A. Tinoco, Chávez-González E., Coelho A.G., Cotton P.A., Dalsgaard B., Lara C., Lasprilla L.R., Machado C.G., Maglianesi M.A., Malucelli T.S., Marin-Gómez O.H., Martín González A.M., Maruyama P.K., O'Hara B., Oliveira G.M., Oliveira P.E., Ortiz-Pulido R., Rahbek C., Rocca M.A., Rodrigues L.C., Sazima I., Sazima M., Schleuning M., Simmons B.I., Sonne J., Varassin I.G., Vasconcelos M.F., Vizentin-Bugoni J.Fuentes:googlescopus