Vol. 184 No.4

Aristolochia chiapensis in the Lacandonia Rainforest located in Chiapas, Mexico. Courtesy of Stefan Wanke.

Vol. 184 No.3

The tropical achlorophyllous orchid, Gastrodia similis, at Mare Longue (La Réunion). Courtesy of Thomas Tully and Florent Martos.

Vol. 184 No.2

Localised autofluorescence in wheat leaves below attempted penetration by the fungus Magnaporthe. Courtesy of Hale Tufan.

Vol. 184 No.1

The great gentian (Gentiana lutea L.) in the Haut-Doubs, France. Courtesy of Michel Chalot.

Vol. 183 No.3

Summer-dormant sand-sheathed roots of the perennial Southern Rush Lyginia barbata. Courtesy of Michael Shane.

Vol. 183 No.3

Bonatea speciosa – a South African species whose flowers Darwin considered to be the most ‘profoundly modified’ of all orchids. Courtesy of Steven Johnson.

Vol. 183 No.2

Drosophila flies visit a yeasty-smelling Pawpaw flower (Asimina triloba) in Columbia, SC, USA. Courtesy of Robert Raguso.

Vol. 183 No.1

The parasitic witchweed, Striga hermonthica, infecting rice roots. Courtesy of Mayuko Sato & Kiminori Toyooka at RIKEN, Japan.

Vol. 182 No.4

The ant Petalomyrmex phylax feeding on nectar-producing glands of its host plant Leonardoxa africana. Courtesy of Rumsaïs Blatrix and Emmanuel Defossez.

Vol. 182 No.3

Circumnutation in Arabidopsis stem over a period of 75 minutes on Earth. Courtesy of Bjarte Gees Bokn Solheim.

Vol. 182 No.2

Zaluzianskya microsiphon, one of several wild flowers coevolved with the long-tongued fly Prosoeca ganglbaueri. Courtesy of Steven Johnson.

Vol. 182 No.1

Hakea psilorrhyncha inflorescence protected from florivores by sharp-pointed needle leaves. Courtesy of Byron Lamont.

Vol. 181 No.4

Amanita muscaria emerging from soil near Pinus radiata on Sunset Boulevard, San Francisco, CA, USA. Courtesy of John Lennie.

Vol. 181 No.3

Restoration of pollen formation in an Arabidopsis male-sterile mutant by complementation. Courtesy of Clive Lo.

Vol. 181 No.2

Sassafras albidum pistillate flowers. Courtesy of Michael Hogan.

Vol. 181 No.1

Cyanobacterial filaments entering the developing megasporocarp of Azolla microphylla through the opening of the indusium chamber. Courtesy of Weiwen Zheng.


   

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