Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula

The study was conducted near the city of Syktyvkar (the Komi Republic). The objects of study were three introduced species of the genus Serratula: S. coronata L., S. inermis Gilib., S. quinquefolia M. Bieb. ex Willd. Comparative characterization of complexes of insect pollinators of three species of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. V. Pestov, K. G. Ufimtsev, V. V. Volodin, S. O. Volodina, A. G. Dontsov, N. I. Filippov, I. V. Beshley
Format: Dataset
Language:Russian
Published: Theoretical and Applied Ecology 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096
http://envjournal.ru/ari/v2017/v3/17311.pdf
id ftdatacite:10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096 2023-05-15T18:30:57+02:00 Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula S. V. Pestov K. G. Ufimtsev V. V. Volodin S. O. Volodina A. G. Dontsov N. I. Filippov I. V. Beshley 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096 http://envjournal.ru/ari/v2017/v3/17311.pdf ru rus Theoretical and Applied Ecology plant-insect interactions pollinating insects bumblebees Serratula ecdysteroids carbohydrates dataset Dataset 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The study was conducted near the city of Syktyvkar (the Komi Republic). The objects of study were three introduced species of the genus Serratula: S. coronata L., S. inermis Gilib., S. quinquefolia M. Bieb. ex Willd. Comparative characterization of complexes of insect pollinators of three species of the genus Serratula in the middle taiga of the Komi Republic is shown. It is established that the complex includes 51 species of insects of five orders. The dominant group of anthophilous insects for representatives of the genus Serratula are bumblebees. Of the 21 species of bumblebees found on the plants, the most common are Bombus jonellus (Kirby), B. pascuorum (Scopoli) and B. sporadicus Nylander, two species – B. sporadicus and B. schrencki Morawitz, included in the Red Data Book of the Komi Republic (2009). The largest share of bumblebees was marked on S. quinquefolia (up to 94% of the total number of insect pollinators). In the nectar of all three species of the genus Serratula discovered 20-hydroxyecdysone. In S. сoronata, also detected the minor component inokosterone and ecdysone. The nectar of the genus Serratula, assembled in the period of mass flowering, contains three main carbohydrate components: sucrose, fructose, and glucose. As for the quantitative content of all types, sucrose dominates. In the nectar of S. quinquefolia its content reaches 50%. The presence of ecdysteroids in the composition of the nectar of plants speaks about possible involvement of these compounds as regulators in the near and far ecological relationships in terrestrial ecosystems. Dataset taiga DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language Russian
topic plant-insect interactions
pollinating insects
bumblebees
Serratula
ecdysteroids
carbohydrates
spellingShingle plant-insect interactions
pollinating insects
bumblebees
Serratula
ecdysteroids
carbohydrates
S. V. Pestov
K. G. Ufimtsev
V. V. Volodin
S. O. Volodina
A. G. Dontsov
N. I. Filippov
I. V. Beshley
Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
topic_facet plant-insect interactions
pollinating insects
bumblebees
Serratula
ecdysteroids
carbohydrates
description The study was conducted near the city of Syktyvkar (the Komi Republic). The objects of study were three introduced species of the genus Serratula: S. coronata L., S. inermis Gilib., S. quinquefolia M. Bieb. ex Willd. Comparative characterization of complexes of insect pollinators of three species of the genus Serratula in the middle taiga of the Komi Republic is shown. It is established that the complex includes 51 species of insects of five orders. The dominant group of anthophilous insects for representatives of the genus Serratula are bumblebees. Of the 21 species of bumblebees found on the plants, the most common are Bombus jonellus (Kirby), B. pascuorum (Scopoli) and B. sporadicus Nylander, two species – B. sporadicus and B. schrencki Morawitz, included in the Red Data Book of the Komi Republic (2009). The largest share of bumblebees was marked on S. quinquefolia (up to 94% of the total number of insect pollinators). In the nectar of all three species of the genus Serratula discovered 20-hydroxyecdysone. In S. сoronata, also detected the minor component inokosterone and ecdysone. The nectar of the genus Serratula, assembled in the period of mass flowering, contains three main carbohydrate components: sucrose, fructose, and glucose. As for the quantitative content of all types, sucrose dominates. In the nectar of S. quinquefolia its content reaches 50%. The presence of ecdysteroids in the composition of the nectar of plants speaks about possible involvement of these compounds as regulators in the near and far ecological relationships in terrestrial ecosystems.
format Dataset
author S. V. Pestov
K. G. Ufimtsev
V. V. Volodin
S. O. Volodina
A. G. Dontsov
N. I. Filippov
I. V. Beshley
author_facet S. V. Pestov
K. G. Ufimtsev
V. V. Volodin
S. O. Volodina
A. G. Dontsov
N. I. Filippov
I. V. Beshley
author_sort S. V. Pestov
title Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
title_short Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
title_full Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
title_fullStr Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
title_full_unstemmed Anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus Serratula
title_sort anthophylous insects diversity and biochemical specificity of nectar and of the genus serratula
publisher Theoretical and Applied Ecology
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096
http://envjournal.ru/ari/v2017/v3/17311.pdf
genre taiga
genre_facet taiga
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25750/1995-4301-2017-3-091-096
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