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How bees and fungi made
orchids
Dr Anton
Pauw and colleagues
Dr Anton
Pauw of Stellenbosch University’s Department of Botany
and Zoology (South Africa) collaborated on a 10 year
study on SA orchid species that shows how mutualism
(that “one hand washes the other” principle in nature)
has helped to create the 22 000 species diversity found
in orchids.
South African orchids and bees have helped a group of
international scientists to shed light on the question
of how one ancestral orchid species managed to spawn the
22 500 kinds of orchids that exist today.
The multinational research team worked for the past ten
years in amongst others the Drakensberg mountains and
fynbos regions such as the Kogelberg area, the Hex River
valley and the Cederberg. The team, of which Dr Anton
Pauw of the Department of Botany and Zoology at
Stellenbosch
University was part, also included researchers from
Imperial College London (UK), Kew Royal Botanic Gardens
Kew (UK), the University of Washington (USA) and the
University of Bayreuth (Germany)
The researchers found that nature’s so-called “one hand
washes the other” principle of mutual benefit has
provided much impetus to the process through which so
many orchid species were created.
The way in which animals pollinate the flowers of almost
all plants in return for food such as nectar, and how
fungi supply minerals to plants roots in return for
sugars, are amongst the best examples of mutualism.
According to the study in American Naturalist
focussing on oil-secreting orchids in South Africa,
these examples of mutualism above and below the ground
have had contrasting effects on plant diversity.
The researchers showed that the variety of ways of
interacting with pollinators aboveground is what
generates the diversity of plants in the first place,
whereas soil fungi allow the diversity of orchids to
thrive harmoniously together in the same area.
The 52 orchid species in the American Naturalist
study belong to a group called the Coryciinae that all
secrete oil inside their flowers. Female Rediviva
bees collect the oil to feed to their larvae.
Scientists have long suspected that insect diversity
can increase plant diversity as plants adapt to new
pollinators.
“What is remarkable in these orchids is that diversity
is generated not only through switches between
pollinators, but also by switches between different body
parts of the same pollinator,” says Dr Anton Pauw from
the Department of Botany and Zoology at
Stellenbosch
University in South Africa. “For example, two closely
related orchids may place pollen on different segments
of the front leg of the same bee.”
A
specific example is the orchids Pterygodium
pentherianum and Pterygodium schelpei. When
they live side by side, Pterygodium pentherianum
puts its pollen on the bee's front legs, whereas
Pterygodium schelpei puts it on the bee's abdomen.

This means that one bee can carry pollen from two
distinct species without mixing it.
Dr Pauw says that mutualistic interactions have created
a diversity of lifestyles: “By tapping into different
kinds of fungi, different plant species access different
pools of nutrients and so the problem of living together
without competing for the same resources is solved.”
Most of the relationships between the oil-collecting
bees and orchids are new to science. Their discovery
required tremendous endurance from the researchers
involved, as both the orchids and bees are rare and only
emerge after a fire sweeps through their remote mountain
habitat.
The belowground mutualisms are even less well known, as
almost all of the fungi belong to unnamed species that
could only be distinguished using DNA barcoding.
“We need a better understanding of these relationships
if we are to predict and counter the effects of the
worldwide decline in pollinators and soil quality,” says
Dr Richard Waterman who participated in the research as
part of his PhD studies at
Imperial
College.
Media contact:
Dr Anton Pauw
Department of Botany and
Zoology
Stellenbosch
University
(021) 808 3314
apauw@sun.ac.za
Please let me know if you need any further photographs.
I am not sending out all, as they are quite huge. The
captions below give an indication of what is available.
Image captions
Fig. 1.
Several kinds of oil-secreting orchids share the same
pollinator by placing pollen on different parts of the
bee’s body. Here the long-legged oil-collecting bee
Rediviva longimanus inspects the oil-secreting
orchid Pterygodium pentherianum.
Fig.
2.
Rediviva macgregori & Pterygodium halii Copyright A
Pauw.jpg
Caption:
The oil-secreting orchid Pterygodium halii, uses
unique scent to attract female oil-collecting bees of
the species Rediviva macgregori.
Fig.
3.
The oil-collecting bee Rediviva longimanus delves
deep into the orchid Pterygodium schelpei to
extract oil with absorbent hairs on its elongated front
feet.
Released
by:
Engela Duvenage, Media: Faculty of Science, Stellenbosch
University
(021) 808 2684
science@sun.ac.za 082 874 1291
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