Fynbos/Thicket Mosaic, as its name implies, is a mixture of fynbos elements (mainly ericoid shrubs and restioids) and large-leaved subtropical shrubs (Cassine and Maytenus, both in the family Celastraceae; Sideroxylon spp., in the family Sapotaceae; Rhus spp. in the family Anacardiaceae). From Wordnik.com. [Lowland fynbos and renosterveld] Reference
Y. cagnagellus, however, still (or again) feed on Celastraceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Yponomeuta lay their eggs and in the larval stage feed on Celastraceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Y. cagnagellus-irrorellus clade, with reversals back to Celastraceae in. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Y. cagnagellus with Euonymus europaeus (Celastraceae), however, is a reversal. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
The genus has a supposed ancestral host-plant association with the spindle tree family Celastraceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
The host shifts that can be reconstructed are from the ancestral Celastraceae to Rosaceae in the ancestor of the. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Females lay their eggs on twigs of a variety of host plants, mainly from the families Celastraceae and Rosaceae, on which the specialist larvae feed. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Y. cagnagellus is supportive of a former association with Rosaceae and therefore its present association with Celastraceae might very well be a backshift. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Think bittersweet, which also is in the Celastraceae family, with its capsulated fruits that burst open to reveal seeds encased in arils, fleshy seed coverings. From Wordnik.com. [columbiatribune.com stories] Reference
Yponomeuta (Lepidoptera, Yponomeutidae) contains 76 species that are specialist feeders on hosts from Celastraceae, Rosaceae, Salicaceae, and several other plant families. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
However, this ancestor being restricted to Celastraceae has a slightly higher likelihood (− lnL 0.3907 vs. 0.3789); the shift is then reconstructed as having taken place in. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
In the Palaearctic, the genus most likely originated in the Far East, feeding on Celastraceae, dispersing to the West concomitant with a shift to Rosaceae and further to Salicaceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Yponomeuta probably arose as an East Asian clade feeding on Celastraceae, and subsequently expanded its distribution area westward to the western Palaearctic and the Canary Islands, and to North America. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Ord. Celastraceae, is figured in Dr. Lindley's Vegetable. From Wordnik.com. [First Footsteps in East Africa] Reference
Cel = Celastraceae, Ros = Rosaceae, Sal = Salicaceae, Cras = Crassulaceae. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Ord. Celastraceae, is figured in Dr. Lindley’s Vegetable Kingdom, p. 588. From Wordnik.com. [First footsteps in East Africa] Reference
(section Nationaal Herbarium Nederland), Leiden, The Netherlands The small ermine moth genus Yponomeuta (Lepidoptera, Yponomeutidae) contains 76 species that are specialist feeders on hosts from Celastraceae, Rosaceae, Salicaceae, and several other plant families. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Yponomeuta belongs to a clade of genera whose ancestral host association is Celastraceae). From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Celastraceae. From Wordnik.com. [Chapter 7] Reference
Plant Family / Families: Celastraceae. From Wordnik.com. [Museum Blogs] Reference
(common in Rosaceae-Rosaceae-feeders are sensitive to this compound-but absent from Celastraceae-Celastraceae-feeders are insensitive) in. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
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