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      Biologia reprodutiva e guilda de visitantes florais de Pseudobombax marginatum (Malvaceae) Translated title: Reproductive biology and flower visitors guild of Pseudobombax marginatum (Malvaceae)

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          Abstract

          Resumo No Brasil, ocorrem 120 espécies do gênero Pseudobombax em diferentes formações vegetacionais. Espécies de Bombacoideae apresentam flores com antese noturna, visitadas por morcegos e esfingídeos. Objetivou-se investigar a biologia reprodutiva de P. marginatum, e conhecer relações entre planta e visitantes. O estudo foi desenvolvido em uma área de caatinga, no município de Afrânio, Pernambuco. Analisou-se a fenologia, biologia floral, comportamento dos visitantes e sistema reprodutivo. P. marginatum apresenta características de flores quiropterófilas, apesar de não receber visitas de morcegos, parecendo estar relacionado ao processo de fragmentação florestal ocorrente na área de estudo. A espécie floresceu entre maio e julho, recebendo visitas de esfingídeos, abelhas, vespas e aves. A produção de néctar foi elevada com baixa concentração de açúcares. Apenas na polinização cruzada obteve-se sucesso, devido à presença de mecanismos de incompatibilidade. P. marginatum apresenta-se em situação crítica quanto à sua regeneração, devido à carência de serviços de polinização eficientes, provavelmente ocasionados pela perturbação na área e ausência de quirópteros visitantes.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract In Brazil, the genus Pseudobombax is represented by some 120 species occurring in different vegetation types. Bombacoideae species have nocturnal flowers and are bat and hawkmoth visited. The aim of the work was to investigate the reproductive biology of P. marginatum, and to describe the plant-floral visitors relationships. The study was carried out in a Caatinga area in Afrânio municipality, Pernambuco state. Phenology, floral biology, flower-visitor behavior and reproductive system were analyzed. P. marginatum has chiropterophilous flowers, although it is not visited by bats, a fact possibly related to the forest fragmentation process in the study area. The flowering period of the species was from May to July, - floral visitors were hawkmoths, bees, wasps and birds. Nectar production was high with low sugar concentration. Reproductive success was obtained only in cross pollination, due to the incompatibility mechanism. P. marginatum presents a critical situation for regeneration due to the lack of efficient pollination services, caused probably by forest fragmentation in the study area and the lack of chiropterans visitors.

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          Flowering Phenology and Diversity in Tropical Bignoniaceae

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            Reproductive patterns and feeding habits of three nectarivorous bats (Phyllostomidae: Glossophaginae) from the Brazilian Cerrado.

            M Zortea (2003)
            The reproductive patterns and feeding habits of three sympatric nectarivorous bats, Glossophaga soricina, Anoura caudifera, and A. geoffroyi were studied in the Pousada das Araras Natural Reserve, located in Central Brazil. The bats were captured with mist nets from August 2000 to July 2001. Reproductive condition was determined by external analyses of the specimens and feeding habits from fecal samples. Glossophaga soricina was the most abundant species (65%), followed by A. geoffroyi (30%) and A. caudifera (5%). Significant differences were observed in the sex-ratio of the two more abundant species. Anoura geoffroyi showed a monoestrous pattern; its reproductive peaks occurred between the end of the dry season and the beginning of the rain season. A seasonal bimodal pattern was recorded for G. soricina, with pregnant specimens showing one peak observed in the dry season and another in the middle of the rainy season. The reproductive pattern of A. caudifera could not be satisfactorily defined because of the small sample size. However, this species apparently has a reproductive cycle similar to that of G. soricina. The patterns observed in this study seem to be related with the climate in the Brazilian savanna (Cerrado), with two well-defined seasons (dry and wet). By adjusting the parturition close to or in the rain season the three species could be favoring a greates survival rate for the offspring, since the critical lactation period would then occur in a time of maximum food availability. The three bat species showed a generalist diet, consuming fruits, pollennectar, and arthropods. Significant differences were observed in the diet of G. soricina: fruits and arthropods predominated in the dry season and pulp (fruits) in the rainy season. Males and females of this species ate the same items in similar proportions. Although A. geoffroyi has not showed a preference for a specific item, consumption of fruits and arthropods was generally greater than that of pollen.
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              Phylogenetic relationships of Malvatheca (Bombacoideae and Malvoideae; Malvaceae sensu lato) as inferred from plastid DNA sequences.

              Previous molecular phylogenetic analyses have revealed that elements of the former families Malvaceae sensu stricto and Bombacaceae together form a well-supported clade that has been named Malvatheca. Within Malvatheca, two major lineages have been observed; one, Bombacoideae, corresponds approximately to the palmate-leaved Bombacaceae, and the other, Malvoideae, includes the traditional Malvaceae (the mallows or Eumalvoideae). However, the composition of these two groups and their relationships to other elements of Malvatheca remain a source of uncertainty. Sequence data from two plastid regions, ndhF and trnK/matK, from 34 exemplars of Malvatheca and six outgroups were analyzed. Parsimony, likelihood, and Bayesian analyses of the sequence data provided a well-resolved phylogeny except that relationships among five lineages at the base of Malvatheca are poorly resolved. Nonetheless, a 6-bp insertion in matK suggests that Fremontodendreae is sister to the remainder of Malvatheca. Our results suggest that the Malvoideae originated in the Neotropics and that a mangrove taxon dispersed across the Pacific from South America to Australasia and later radiated out of Australasia to give rise to the ca. 1700 living species of Eumalvoideae. Local clock analyses imply that the plastid genome underwent accelerated molecular evolution coincident with the dispersal out of the Americas and again with the radiation into the three major clades of Eumalvoideae.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                rod
                Rodriguésia
                Rodriguésia
                Instituto de Pesquisas Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro
                2175-7860
                June 2016
                : 67
                : 2
                : 395-404
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco Brazil
                [2 ] Universidade Estadual de Alagoas Brazil
                [3 ] Universidade Federal do Vale do São Francisco Brazil
                Article
                S2175-78602016000200395
                10.1590/2175-7860201667211
                18ba5b90-e017-4285-95e6-198767fa5f5b

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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                SciELO Brazil

                Self URI (journal page): http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_serial&pid=2175-7860&lng=en
                Categories
                ECOLOGY
                PLANT SCIENCES

                Plant science & Botany,Ecology
                forest fragmentation,pollination service,incompatibility mechanism,fragmentação florestal,serviço de polinização,mecanismos de incompatibilidade

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