Monday, August 2, 2010: 4:30 PM-6:30 PM | |||
Exhibit Hall A, David L Lawrence Convention Center | |||
PS 18 - Pollination | |||
PS 18-144 | Edge effects and American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius L.) reproduction Zachary R. Bradford, West Virginia University, James B. McGraw, West Virginia University | ||
PS 18-145 | Unexpected generalized pollination system in a tropical island herb, Heliconia caribaea Stephanie Cruz Maysonet, University of Puerto Rico in Bayamón, Elvia Meléndez-Ackerman, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras and Center for Applied Tropical Ecology and Conservation (CREST-CATEC), Silvana Martén-Rodríguez, National Museum of Natural History - Smithsonian Institution | ||
PS 18-146 | Pollen movement and reproductive success in northern Ohio populations of mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) Megan P. Post, Baldwin-Wallace College, Michael N. Melampy, Baldwin-Wallace College | ||
PS 18-147 | The effect of pollinator behavior on pollen transfer across a geographic landscape: Claytonia virginica and Andrena erigeniae Alison Parker, University of Toronto, James D. Thomson, University of Toronto, Neal M. Williams, University of California-Davis | ||
PS 18-148 | Native family size, not invasion history, determines integration of alien plants into a native plant-pollinator network Yan Yi A. Chung, Washington University in St. Louis, Laura A. Burkle, Washington University in St. Louis, Tiffany M. Knight, Washington University in St. Louis | ||
PS 18-149 | Interspecific co-flowering prairie plants compete for pollinators Megan K. Gallagher, Northwestern University and Chicago Botanic Garden, Miriam M. Jenkins, University of Pittsburgh, Amanda Gallinat, Chicago Botanic Garden and University of Minnesota, Greg Diersen, Great Plains Lutheran High School, Gretel Kiefer , Chicago Botanic Garden, Stuart Wagenius, Chicago Botanic Garden | ||
PS 18-150 | The effect of pollen and resource availability on reproductive allocation in selfing and outcrossing desert annual plants Katharine L. Gerst, University of Arizona, D. Lawrence Venable, University of Arizona | ||
PS 18-151 | Pollen abundance predicts attractiveness of desert plants to bees Tai Roulston, University of Virgnia |
See more of Posters
See more of The 95th ESA Annual Meeting (August 1 -- 6, 2010)