Artigo Revisado por pares

Cycad cone and angiosperm floral volatiles: Inferences for the evolution of insect pollination

1991; Elsevier BV; Volume: 19; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0305-1978(91)90078-e

ISSN

1873-2925

Autores

Olle Pellmyr, William Tang, Inga Groth, Günnar Bergström, Leonard B. Thiens,

Tópico(s)

Plant and animal studies

Resumo

The chemistry of the volatile emissions of male cones of four putatively insect-pollinated cycad (Cycadales) species and cones of both sexes of one wind-pollinated cycad species was analysed using GC-MS Zamia furfuracea, Macrozamia moorei, and Encephalartos altensteinii had blends consisting primarily of monoterpenoids, benzenoids, and in two causes, a di-unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbon, while that of Zamia pumila was dominated by methyl salicylate, with sesquiterpenes and aliphatic hydrocarbons also present. In contrast, the wind-pollinated Cycas rumphii contained a series of highly alcohols, ketones and esters. The compounds classes found in the cycads are potent herbivore deterrents, and there is no apparent difference in this regard between insect- and wind-pollinated species. The results suggest convergent evolution in the gymnospermous cycads and magnoliid angiosperms of the olfactory cues that attract pollinating insects; the data are consistent with the hypothesis that early chemical attractants for pollinators evolved from herbivore deterrents.

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