Scott Mori
New York Botanical Garden
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Journal of The Torrey Botanical Society | 2004
Nathan P. Smith; Scott Mori; Andrew Henderson; Dennis W. Stevenson; S. V. Heald
Preface ix Contributors xi Acknowledgments xv Introduction xvii Editors Note xxi Dicotyledons 1 Monocotyledons 403 Glossary 497 Literature Cited 525 Appendix I Cronquist Dicotyledon Classification 529 Appendix II Dahlgren et al. Monocotyledon Classification 531 Appendix III Families treated in Flowering Plants of the Neotropics 532 Appendix IV Families of Angiosperms treated by Judd et al. 533 Appendix V Aids to Identification 535 Index to Scientific Names 563
Botanical Review | 1997
Gérard Tavakilian; Amy Berkov; Barbara Meurer-Grimes; Scott Mori
Estimates of the total number of species in existence are based, in part, upon assumptions about the host specificity of tropical insects. These estimates are difficult to evaluate because there is so little data available describing the host-plant affiliations of tropical insects. Over a three-year period, 690 trees in the Sinnamary River Basin of French Guiana were felled and investigated for their associated cerambycid fauna. These trees (belonging to approximately 200 species representing 38 plant families) ultimately gave rise to 334 species of cerambycids. One-quarter of these beetle species had not yet been described, and hundreds of previously unknown host-plant associations were documented. These data are presented in a table which also includes the results of additional rearing experiments in French Guiana, as well as selected literature references. Organized by host-tree family, the table facilitates the circumscription of beetle guilds occurring on related hosts. Abundantly represented plant families typically gave rise to faunas including numerous taxonomically unrelated beetles. The beetle guilds associated with different plant families had very different ratios of specialist:generalist species. The majority of the specialists successfully reproduced in related tree species belonging to a particular plant family; only a few cerambycid species appear to depend exclusively on a single host. These data contribute to an understanding of host specificity and host fidelity in tropical insects.
Journal of The Torrey Botanical Society | 2008
Julie Feinstein; Kenneth L. Purzycki; Scott Mori; Vanessa Hequet; Amy Berkov
Abstract Two species of Stratiomyidae, Ptecticus nigrifrons Enderlein and Ptecticus sp., were reared from fallen androecia of Lecythis poiteaui Berg (Lecythidaceae) at rain forest sites in French Guiana. Floral aromas were collected by headspace adsorption from the night-blooming flowers. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis (GC-MS) identified several sulfur-containing compounds that contribute to the characteristic foul odor of the flowers. Although stratiomyids are thought to be generalist associates of decaying matter of plant and animal origin, we suggest that fetid floral attractants may make L. poiteaui flowers especially attractive to certain flies. This is the first report of Lecythidaceae flowers hosting stratiomyid flies.
Archive | 1997
Scott Mori; Bobbi Angell; Georges Cremers; Jean-Jacques de Granville; Carol Gracie
Journal of Natural Products | 2003
Hui Yang; Petr Protiva; Baoliang Cui; Cuiying Ma; Scott Baggett; Vanessa Hequet; Scott Mori; I. Bernard Weinstein; Edward J. Kennelly
Archive | 1997
Paul E. Berry; Scott Mori; Georges Cremers; Carol Gracie; J.-J. de Granville; Michel Hoff; J. D. Mitchell
Pharmaceutical Biology | 1999
Ivelisse Rovira; Amy Berkov; Ainsley Parkinson; Gérard Tavakilian; Scott Mori; Barbara Meurer-Grimes
Biotropica | 2007
Julie Feinstein; Scott Mori; Amy Berkov
Archive | 2011
Amy Berkov; Carol Gracie; Scott Mori
Archive | 1993
Georges Cremers; Christian Feuillet; Carol Gracie; Jean-Jacques de Granville; Michel Hoff; Scott Mori