JavaScript must be enabled in order for you to use the Site in standard view. However, it seems JavaScript is either disabled or not supported by your browser. To use standard view, enable JavaScript by changing your browser options.

| Last Updated::26/11/2019

Journals & Scientific Papers

Title: Pollination in an Endemic and Threatened Monoecious Herb Begonia satrapis C.B. Clarke (Begoniaceae) in the Eastern Himalaya, India
KeyWords: Journal of Threatened Taxa, Begonia satrapis, Apis florea, Bombus breviceps, deceit, northeastern India, Sumbuk
Year of Publication: 2019
ISSN No: ISSN 0974-7907 (Online)
Author Name: Subhankar Gurung, Aditya Pradhan & Arun Chettri
Details:

 

 

Abstract: Begonia satrapis was studied for its pollination aspects at Sumbuk, Sikkim, India. The floral details and the foraging behaviour of insects visiting the flowers were examined to define the pollination syndrome and its functionality for the success of sexual reproduction in this species. The flowers do not produce nectar and offer only pollen as floral reward to foraging insects. Therefore, male flowers were foraged more for its pollen than the female flowers. There was a significant difference in the visit to male and female flowers by both Apis florea and Bombus breviceps, respectively. The bees spent more time on male flowers than on female flowers. The bees appear to rely
on visual stimuli to visit male and female flowers. The plant produces abundant fruit and seed set in both hand and open-pollinations indicating that it is facultatively xenogamous. The female flowers lacking any reward resemble male flowers and in effect are pollinated by deceit.