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Philip Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 06-10-2013 at 01:53 PM.. |
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Ohhhhhh......ok ok ok ok. I get it now. Thank you.
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This is a blog by a blogger called "Sarawak Lens", it talks about how a certain species of fruit fly is a nuisance because it knocks off anther caps on the blogger's Phalaenopsis bellina.
Sarawak Lens: Phal bellina and dealing with bothersome fruit flies! I think the fly in the photo is the pollinator. Given how the fly is shaped, and how the side lobes of the labellum are formed, it makes sense. It also makes sense as to why Phalaenopsis bellina is fragrant and brightly colored - the flies are attracted to the colors and the smell. Btw, the fruit fly in the photo is clearly not Drosophila melanogaster or Drosophila hydei. It is another species altogether. The fruit fly pictured in the blog is probably something in the genus Bactrocera. It could be Bactrocera papayae, Bactrocera dorsalis, or Bactrocera cucurbitae. Looking more closely, the fly is most likely Bactrocera dorsalis.
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Philip Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 06-11-2013 at 02:13 PM.. |
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Sex and food. Orchids are the lazy plant. They want to expend as little energy as possible while reproducing, while saving enough to reproduce again. Most orchids trick their pollinators into trying to mate with it. Others put off a scent like a flower that would have pollen, but doesn't. Some put off the stench of a rotting carcass to be pollinated by flies. It really varies from plant to plant, but orchids are a clever group; they don't want to spend energy producing nectar or sweet smells if they don't need to.
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With the Euglossine Bee species Euglossa viridissima and the orchids in the genus Coryanthes, there is a special trade-off.
Euglossa viridissima pollinates the Coryanthes species, but the Coryanthes species provides a special chemical that gives the male Euglossine Bee a mating scent to present the female Euglossine Bee during courtship. There could be similar things going on with certain pollinators and some species of orchids. Particularly when the orchid(s) seem to attract a specific gender of a pollinating insect species without having to produce flower parts that deceive the pollinating insect into mistaking the orchid's flower for an insect of the opposite sex. With orchids such as those in the genus Ophrys, it is very clear that the pollinators are the ones being deceived into mistaking the orchid flower for an insect of the opposite sex. Whether this deception is solely visual based, or chemically based, or both, I'm not entirely sure yet. So far, I have found possible evidence that it could be both! NZNOG Journal 100 - Orchid nectaries There are yet other orchids that are mimics of other flowers. One example that I recently discovered was Disa ferruginea. The Red Cluster Disa (Disa ferruginea) is actually a mimic of the iris (Tritoniopsis triticea). The Disa mimics the Tritoniopsis to trick the pollinators of Tritoniopsis triticea into pollinating it. Patches of Disa ferruginea also incidentally grow near stands of Tritoniopsis triticea. It's kinda strange... For a non-sentient living organism such as an orchid, I find them to be rather "clever" with their diverse, and often times, complex pollinating mechanisms/strategies.
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Philip Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 07-09-2013 at 11:30 AM.. |
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Btw, I just remembered that some orchids actually do have real nectaries, and I have possibly found evidence that these orchids do not shut off their supply of nectar once the pollinator is attracted to the flower.
So, in some cases with orchids, there is a nectar/pollination trade-off. (aka: In some cases, there is a nectar reward for pollinating the orchid flower.) http://aob.oxfordjournals.org/content/93/1/87.full.pdf There are also orchids that do not use deception at all! Disa chrysostachya gets pollinated because the inflorescence acts as a possible perching spot for a few species of South African Sunbirds. In this case, there is an indirect reward for pollinating the orchid's flowers - the reward being a tall perch.
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Philip Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 07-09-2013 at 11:47 AM.. |
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My friend and I were just talking about pollination. I mentioned that honeybees aren't native to the Americas and I wondered how many native orchids they successfully and regularly pollinate. Then we started talking about how Phalaenopsis are by far the most commonly grown orchid here in the Americas. I told my friend that I haven't heard of any of them being naturally pollinated here. So we wondered who naturally pollinates them in their native habitat. I searched for "natural pollination of Phalaenopsis" and found this thread.
According to the Wikipedia entry for Phalaenopsis amabilis, it's pollinated by "large carpenter bees from the genus Xylocopa". So maybe our carpenter bees aren't large enough? Or they aren't interested? Or perhaps the Phalaenopsis hybrids are larger than amabilis? Personally I'm pretty sure that hummingbirds have pollinated my Dendrobium bigibbum and Dendrobium teretifolium and some other species that aren't native to the Americas. I wish that I was a vampire so that I could see how the mix of nonnative and native species and pollinators would influence the orchid family over time.
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