4.7 Article

Pollination in Epidendrum densiflorum Hook. (Orchidaceae: Laeliinae): Fraudulent Trap-Flowers, Self-Incompatibility, and a Possible New Type of Mimicry

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12030679

Keywords

Arctiidae; Epidendrum; Ithominae; Laeliinae; Orchidaceae; pollination

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The pollination and breeding system of Epidendrum densiflorum were studied, revealing that pollination is exclusively carried out by daytime male Lepidoptera. The flowers are nectarless, yet the insects still insert their proboscides into them and remove or deposit the pollinaria while searching for nectar. The plant is highly dependent on pollinators and has low fruiting success, consistent with the patterns observed in rewardless orchids globally.
The pollination and the breeding system of Epidendrum densiflorum (Orchidaceae: Laeliinae) were studied through fieldwork and controlled pollinations in cultivated plants. Pollination is exclusively promoted by males of diurnal Lepidoptera: five species of Arctiinae and four of Ithomiinae were recorded as pollinators. These male insects are known to obtain alkaloids (through the nectar) in flowers of Asteraceae and Boraginaceae. However, the flowers of E. densiflorum are nectarless, despite presenting a cuniculus (a likely nectariferous cavity). Pollinators insert their proboscides into the flowers and remove or deposit the pollinaria while searching for nectar. The floral tube is very narrow, and insects struggle for up to 75 min to get rid of the flowers. Plants are pollinator-dependent and nearly fully self-incompatible. Pollinarium removal, pollination, and fruiting success (2.85%) were very low; facts that are consistent with the patterns globally observed in deceptive (rewardless) orchids. Nilsson's male efficiency factor (0.245) was also low, indicating pollen loss in the system. Based on our field observations, we suggest that the fragrance of E. densiflorum likely mimics these plants that are normally used as a source of alkaloids by male Lepidoptera, a hypothesis that we intend to test in the future.

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