4.6 Article

Floral thermogenesis of three species of Hydnora (Hydnoraceae) in Africa

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 104, Issue 5, Pages 823-832

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcp168

Keywords

Pollination biology; Hydnora; thermogenesis; respiration rate; temperature; flowers; insects

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Environment and Tourism of Namibia [1350/2009]
  2. Parc Nationaux Madagascar [291/07]
  3. Australian Research Council [DP 0771854]
  4. Mary Payne Hogan Botany Endowment
  5. Missouri Botanical Garden
  6. University of Namibia Research and Publication Committee

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Floral thermogenesis occurs in at least 12 families of ancient seed plants. Some species show very high rates of respiration through the alternative pathway, and some are thermoregulatory, with increasing respiration at decreasing ambient temperature. This study assesses the intensity and regulation of respiration in three species of African Hydnora that represent the Hydnoraceae, an unusual family of holoparasitic plants from arid environments. Long-term respirometry (CO(2) production) and thermometry were carried out on intact flowers of H. africana, H. abyssinica and H. esculenta in the field, and short-term measurements were made on floral parts during the protogynous flowering sequence. For H. africana, there was no temperature elevation in either the osmophores or the gynoecial chamber in any phase, and mass-specific respiration rates of the flower parts were low (maximum 8 center dot 3 nmol CO(2) g(-1) s(-1) in osmophore tissue). Respiration tracked ambient and floral temperatures, eliminating the possibility of the inverse relationship expected in thermoregulatory flowers. Hydnora abyssinica flowers had higher respiration (maximum 27 center dot 5 nmol g(-1) s(-1) in the osmophores) and a slight elevation of osmophore temperature (maximum 2 center dot 8 degrees C) in the female stage. Respiration by gynoecial tissue was similar to that of osmophores in both species, but there was no measurable elevation of gynoecial chamber temperature. Gynoecial chamber temperature of H. esculenta could reach 3 center dot 8 degrees C above ambient, but there are no respiration data available. Antheral tissue respiration was maximal in the male phase (4 center dot 8 nmol g(-1) s(-1) in H. africana and 10 center dot 3 nmol g(-1) s(-1) in H. abyssinica), but it did not raise the antheral ring temperature, which showed that thermogenesis is not a by-product of pollen maturation or release. The exceptionally low thermogenesis in Hydnora appears to be associated with scent production and possibly gynoecial development, but has little direct benefit to beetle pollinators.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available