Dinesh

Dinesh club

Posted: 29 Jul 2021


Taken: 28 Jul 2021

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California
Sacramento
Botany
Survival


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Creeper

Creeper
According to the nature of the stem the plants are often classi­fied into groups:- 1. Herbs 2. Shrubs 3. Trees 4. Trailers 5. Climbers.


Climbers:

These are the weak plants which grow up¬right only with the help of some kind of support.

Many weak plants produce hard, pointed hook-like bodies for climbing. Artabotrys (B. Kan-thali champa) bears hooks on the floral axis (Fig. 52, 3). Pointed prickles are present in many wild roses and canes for the same purpose.

Tendrils are the slender leafless bodies remarkably sensitive to contact. As soon as they come in contact with any support they quickly coil round it and thus help the plant in climbing. Plant-parts like stems , leaves and even floral axis are modified into tendrils.

Comments
 Dinesh
Dinesh club
Natural selection plays a fundamental role in the ecological theory of adaptive radiation. A prediction of this theory is the convergent evolution of traits in lineages experiencing similar environments. The Hawaiian honeycreepers are a spectacular example of adaptive radiation and may demonstrate convergence, but uncertainty about phylogenetic relationships within the group has made it difficult to assess such evolutionary patterns. We examine the phylogenetic relationships of the Hawaii creeper (Oreomystis mana), a bird that in a suite of morphological, ecological and behavioural traits closely resembles the Kauai creeper (Oreomystis bairdi), but whose mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and osteology suggest a relationship with the amakihis (Hemignathus in part) and akepas (Loxops). We analysed nuclear DNA sequence data from 11 relevant honeycreeper taxa and one outgroup to test whether the character contradiction results from historical hybridization and mtDNA introgression, or convergent evolution. We found no evidence of past hybridization, a phenomenon that remains undocumented in Hawaiian honeycreepers, and confirmed mtDNA and osteological evidence that the Hawaii creeper is most closely related to the amakihis and akepas. Thus, the morphological, ecological and behavioural similarities between the evolutionarily distant Hawaii and Kauai creepers represent an extreme example of convergent evolution and demonstrate how natural selection can lead to repeatable evolutionary outcomes.
3 years ago.
 raingirl
raingirl club
very interesting. was this to become a squash of some sort? (thanks for adding to 'plants vs structures')
2 years ago.

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