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Pollen layering and male-male competition: Quantum dots demonstrate that pollen grains compete for space on pollinators.

Monika MoirBruce Anderson
Published in: American journal of botany (2023)
The proportion of labeled pollen from the last flower visited diminished in sequential pollen samples taken from the top to the bottom of the pollen load, representing the first empirical evidence for pollen layering. However, the consequences in terms of pollen preclusion were equivocal: Although the pre-existing pollen load size was not a good predictor of new pollen receipt, labeled pollen loads from the last flower visited were significantly smaller than pollen loads from the previous flower visited. Thus, pollen from the previous flower may preclude pollen placement from a subsequently visited flower, and pollen from different flowers may compete for space on pollinators.
Keyphrases
  • quantum dots
  • computed tomography
  • sensitive detection
  • energy transfer