| Abstract Detail
The Power of Movement in Plants Dumais, Jacques [1], Fulop, Daniel [1], Kramer, Elena M [2]. Pollinarium ejection and the evolution of hypervariable male flowers in Catasetum orchids. Orchids possess an exquisite suite of characters to support pollination. Among the most remarkable of these characters is the forcible pollinarium discharge of the genus Catasetum. When ejected from a male flower, the pollinarium attaches precisely to the dorsum of a bee, which will, upon visiting a female flower, deposit the pollen-bearing pollinia into the stigmatic cavity, thus achieving pollination. The fast release of the pollinarium and precise targeting to the bee’s dorsum are critical for successful pollination in the genus; yet these features have received only limited attention in the literature. In this talk, we show that the impulse that propels the pollinarium comes from the elastic energy stored in the stipe and that subsequent interaction with the flower column guides the pollinarium toward the bee. This active pollination mechanism stands in sharp contrast with pollination in the majority of orchid genera where floral architecture must ensure that the pollinator comes in direct contact with the static pollinarium. In Catasetum, the pollinarium guidance mechanism and remote triggering via the action of the antennae have relaxed this structural constraint in the design of flowers. This innovation, we propose, has enabled the exceptional diversification of male flower morphology in the genus. To support this claim, we show that one major axis of diversification – the degree of flower opening – correlates precisely with the key biomechanical parameter for pollinarium guidance. Our results give new insight into the evolutionary mechanisms behind the staggering morphological diversity found in orchids. Log in to add this item to your schedule
1 - Harvard University, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, 16 Divinity Ave, Cambridge, MA, 02138, USA 2 - Harvard Univerisity, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, 16 Divinity Ave, Biolabs 1109, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138, USA
Keywords: orchid pollination biomechanics Catasetum.
Presentation Type: Symposium or Colloquium Presentation Session: SY1 Location: Ballroom 2/Cliff Lodge - Level B Date: Monday, July 27th, 2009 Time: 8:45 AM Number: SY1003 Abstract ID:62 |