@article{hamon_youngsteadt_irwin_sorenson_2024, title={As prey and pollinators, insects increase reproduction and allow for outcrossing in the carnivorous plant Dionaea muscipula}, ISSN={0002-9122 1537-2197}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.16279}, DOI={10.1002/ajb2.16279}, abstractNote={Abstract}, journal={American Journal of Botany}, publisher={Wiley}, author={Hamon, Laura E. and Youngsteadt, Elsa and Irwin, Rebecca E. and Sorenson, Clyde E.}, year={2024}, month={Jan} } @article{hamon_youngsteadt_irwin_sorenson_2018, title={Pollination Ecology and Morphology of Venus Flytrap in Sites of Varying Time Since Last Fire}, volume={112}, ISSN={0013-8746 1938-2901}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aesa/say032}, DOI={10.1093/aesa/say032}, abstractNote={Management of natural habitats is an important strategy for rare plant conservation. One common tool for managing natural habitats is the use of controlled fire. Rare plants in fire-dependent ecosystems often rely on frequent fires to increase nutrient availability, initiate germination, and limit cover from light competitors. Fire can also alter arthropod communities, including the pollinator communities upon which many flowering plants rely for sexual reproduction. However, it remains unclear how fire affects the pollination ecology of rare plants in fire-dependent ecosystems. Here we studied sites of varying burn history to examine the role of time since last fire on the morphology, flower visitor community, and degree of pollen limitation of seed production of Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula Ellis) (Caryophyllales: Droseraceae). The area occupied by blooming D. muscipula and number of traps per individual decreased with increasing time since burn. Though flower visitor richness and evenness were highest in sites of intermediate time post-burn, we found no differences in the composition of the flower visitor community in sites of different burn histories. Hand-pollinated flowers produced 8.3% more seeds per fruit than open-pollinated flowers, indicating that D. muscipula was pollen-limited, but burn history did not affect the magnitude of pollen limitation. Though we found no clear effect of burn history on the pollination ecology of D. muscipula, differences in blooming area and trap number suggest that burn history influences its distribution and growth, and affirms the benefits of frequent fires to its persistence.}, number={3}, journal={Annals of the Entomological Society of America}, publisher={Oxford University Press (OUP)}, author={Hamon, Laura E and Youngsteadt, Elsa and Irwin, Rebecca E and Sorenson, Clyde E}, year={2018}, month={Sep}, pages={141–149} }