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Insects wearing two hats solve botanical mystery
- February 17, 2025
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The discovery of a unique case where the same insect species both pollinate a plant and distribute its seeds not only solves a long-standing botanical mystery. The Kobe University find also stresses the diverse roles insects play in our ecosystem.
The Kobe University botanist SUETSUGU Kenji specializes in understanding the interactions between these parasitic plants and their surrounding ecosystems, including the often overlooked but crucial role of invertebrate pollinators and seed dispersers. To find out who aids B. subcupularis in its reproduction, he and his team watched the plants for more than 100 hours and took tens of thousands of automated night photographs while the flower was in bloom or bore fruit, identifying the visitors. In addition, they conducted both animal exclusion experiments and seed feeding experiments to ascertain whether the animals on the photographs are actually effective pollinators and seed dispersers.
In two back-to-back papers published in the journal Ecology, the Kobe University team published that B. subcupularis is pollinated by ants and camel crickets, which visit the plants for their pollen and nectar. Remarkably, these same species also later feed on the fleshy leaves carrying the seeds, aiding in seed dispersal. “It is well known that many plants rely on insects for pollination, although it’s rare for ants and crickets. Also, many plants use birds and mammals to distribute their fruits, and again it’s very unusual that crickets or other tiny arthropods take over this role. Even more striking, it is very rare for the same animal to perform both functions, and it is unique that the same invertebrates do so,” says Suetsugu on his surprise about this finding.
Suetsugu also highlights the broader implications of these findings: “This underscores the importance of invertebrates in plant reproduction and encourages us to look deeper into how these relationships evolve and what environmental factors drive such unique adaptations. More practically, our findings also contribute to conservation strategies for rare and endangered plants like Balanophora subcupularis. Understanding their reliance on specific invertebrates for both pollination and seed dispersal helps inform habitat preservation efforts and the management of invertebrate populations, which are crucial for these plants’ survival.”
List of Referenes
- Kenji Suetsugu, Hiromu Hashiwaki. Beyond pollination: Ants and camel crickets as double mutualists in a non‐photosynthetic plant. Ecology, 2024; DOI: 10.1002/ecy.4465
- Kenji Suetsugu, Hiromu Hashiwaki. Ants, camel crickets, and cockroaches as pollinators: The unsung heroes of a non‐photosynthetic plant. Ecology, 2024; DOI: 10.1002/ecy.4464
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