4.7 Article

Observations on the pollination and breeding systems of two Corybas species (Diurideae; Orchidaceae) by fungus gnats (Mycetophilidae) in southwestern Yunnan, China

Journal

BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12870-022-03816-1

Keywords

Fly pollination; Fungus mimicry; Deception; Pollinator; Cross-pollination

Categories

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB31000000]
  2. Special Foundation for National Science and Technology Basic Research Program of China [2021FY100200]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31971570]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Yunnan Province [2019FB035]
  5. Yunlin Scholarship of Yunnan Province [YLXL20170001]

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This study reports the role of fungus gnats as pollinators for the orchid species Corybas geminigibbus and C. shanlinshiensis in southwestern Yunnan, China. The fungus gnats were found to carry the pollinia on their thoraces and no eggs were found in the flowers. Fragrance analyses did not suggest that these orchid species were mimicking mushroom brood-sites. This is the first confirmation of fungus gnats dispersing the pollinia of Corybas species in subtropical-temperate Asia.
Modes of floral presentation in some angiosperms attract flies that eat and/or oviposit on seasonal fruiting bodies of fungi. Mushroom mimesis by orchid flowers has been speculated in the geoflorous, Indo-Malaysian-Australasian, genus Corybas s.l. for decades but most studies remain fragmentary and are often inconclusive. Here we report the roles of fungus gnats as pollinators of Corybas geminigibbus and C. shanlinshiensis in southwestern Yunnan, China, combining results of field observations, lab analyses, and manipulative experiments. Hand pollination experiments suggested both species were self-compatible but incapable of mechanical self-pollination, thereby requiring pollinators for fruit production. A female of a Phthinia sp. (Mycetophilidae) carried a pollinarium of C. geminigibbus dorsally on its thorax. Two females and one male of Exechia sp. (Mycetophilidae) visiting flowers of C. shanlinshiensis carried dorsal depositions of pollinaria on their thoraces. Mycetophilid eggs were not found in the flowers of either species. The comparative fragrance analyses of these flowers and three co-fruiting mushroom species did not suggest that either orchid species was a brood-site mimic. This is the first confirmation of the dispersal of pollinaria of Corybas species by fungus gnats in subtropical-temperate Asia.

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