Adaptations for insect-trapping in brood-site pollinated Colocasia (Araceae)

David Bröderbauer, Silvia Ulrich, Anton Weber

    Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

    Abstract

    The Araceae include both taxa with rewarding and deceptive trap pollination systems. Here we report on a genus in which rewarding and imprisonment of the pollinators co-occur. We studied the pollination of four species of Colocasia in Southwest China and investigated the morpho-anatomical adaptations of the spathe related to the attraction and capture of pollinators. All four species were pollinated by drosophilid flies of the genus Colocasiomyia. The flies are temporally arrested within the inflorescence and departure is only possible after pollen release. Trapping of the flies is accomplished by the closure of the spathe during anthesis. Moreover, in two species the spathe is covered with papillate epidermal cells known to form slippery surfaces in deceptive traps of Araceae. However, in Colocasia the papillae proved not slippery for the flies. The morpho-anatomical properties of the spathe epidermis indicate that it is an elaborate osmophore and serves for the emission of odours only. Despite its similarity to deceptive traps of other aroids, Colocasia and Colocasiomyia have a close symbiotic relationship, as the attracted flies use the inflorescence as a site for mating and breeding. The trap mechanism has presumably evolved independently in Colocasia and is supposed to facilitate more efficient pollen export.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)659-668
    Number of pages10
    JournalPlant Biology
    Volume16
    Issue number3
    Early online date30 Sept 2013
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2014

    Austrian Fields of Science 2012

    • 106049 Ultrastructure research
    • 106008 Botany
    • 106029 Plant morphology

    Keywords

    • Colocasiomyia
    • Deceptive pollination
    • Endoplasmatic reticulum
    • Mutualism
    • Nursery pollination
    • Osmophore

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