Sexually Deceptive Orchid Seeks Specialty Pollinator
Sex sells, especially when it comes to pollination. Sometimes, however, nobody is buying what you’re selling.
That appears to be the case for the critically endangered grand spider orchid (), a beautiful Australian species with an extremely limited range and an even more limited range of pollinators.
Most plants have a small set of preferred pollinators and may only get that service from a handful of species. The grand spider orchid takes that to an extreme. According to published this month in the , the plant relies on a single species.
This research throws a big monkey wrench in the Australian government’s for the grand spider orchid. Several facets of the program involve increasing the plant’s range. Unfortunately, the researchers found that the small wasps are only present in about 4 percent of those potential new or restored habitats. Lack of wasps means no pollination for the grand spider orchid, which means no more plants after the current batch ages and dies.
Hopefully that won’t require a whole new level of evolutionary deception.
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