Flora - A Twist of Fate
A Floral Twist of Fate
- New Zealand mistletoes
Natural
History, Sept,
2000 by Laura
A. Sessions
New Zealand mistletoes that bear
strange, sealed flowers depend
on savvy native pollinators to
thrive.
Every year in December, the beginning
of the austral summer, the green
temperate rainforests in parts
of New Zealand come alive with
bright-red mistletoe flowers. One
of my favorite places to see this
natural display of Christmas color
is a thirty-acre fragment of southern
beech forest on the shore of South
Island's Lake Ohau. This turquoise
glacial lake lies in the shadow
of the central Southern Alps' snowy
peaks. Nearly every southern beech
in this patch of forest is host
to one or more large mistletoe
plants. Botanists categorize mistletoes
as hemiparasites--plants that can
make food through photosynthesis
after siphoning water and mineral
nutrients from a host plant via
rootlike structures that penetrate
the host's bark and vascular system.
The mistletoes that grow on the
Ohau beeches can reach nine feet
in both length and width and can
virtually envelop a tree, but unlike
their European and North American
counterparts, they do not damage
their hosts. When the mistletoe
flowers mature, they drop from
the plant and form red piles on
the forest floor, like confetti
from a holiday party.
A visitor to the Ohau forest who
examines these fallen blossoms
will notice that many of them have
opened upside-down. While the petals
of most other flowers are joined
at the bottom and fold back from
each other at their tips, these
mistletoe petals are fused at the
top and detached at the base. The
stigma, or pollen-receiving structure,
stays sealed within the flower
tip, hidden from any pollinators
that might fertilize the bloom
and thus stimulate fruit and seed
production, leading to a new generation
of mistletoes. Why would a plant
produce hundreds of flowers if
they remain inaccessible to pollinators?
In 1969, referring to these sealed
flowers, botanist Job Kuijt declared, "We
cannot even guess at the meaning
of this bizarre performance."
Thanks to a research project that
began in 1992 and continues today,
we can offer more than a guess
at the significance of the fallen
and unfertilized mistletoe flowers.
We now know that these mistletoes
have a pollination system unique
in New Zealand and that the unpollinated
blooms dying on the forest floor
represent a breakdown of the system.
Led by Dave Kelly and Jenny Ladley,
of the University of Canterbury
in Christchurch, the project, which
I joined in 1996, has gradually
been transmogrified into a ten-person
field effort. Every December, as
other people prepare to celebrate
the holidays, we gather our ladders
and video cameras, sort through
piles of tiny colored wires, mesh
bags, batteries, chemicals, and
microscope slides, and head out
to the field. We now monitor more
than 200 plants throughout New
Zealand to determine changes in
their size, health, and rates of
pollination and fruiting. We also
take more than 100 hours of video
footage each year to record which
pollinators visit plants and how
they behave.
While mistletoes grow in temperate
and tropical regions worldwide,
New Zealand is home to eight species
that occur nowhere else and one
that is also found only on Norfolk
Island in the Tasman Sea, between
New Zealand and Australia. Our
research has focused on two of
these species, red mistletoe (Peraxilla
tetrapetala) and scarlet mistletoe
(P. colensoi).
In one of their first experiments,
Kelly and Ladley attempted to learn
more about New Zealand mistletoe
reproduction by putting mesh bags
over branches bearing unripe buds.
The flowers could then be hand-pollinated,
and the potential fruit production
could be estimated. Or so Kelly
and Ladley thought. After several
weeks of close monitoring, the
buds had ripened but failed to
open. Eventually they began to
split from the bottom, as Kuijt
had noted, and to fall off the
branches. This occurrence and a
knowledge of the ways in which
certain African and Indian mistletoes
achieve pollination gave the researchers
clues to what might be going on.
On Christmas Eve of 1992, Ladley
watched from just a few feet away
as a tui, a native honeyeater (a
nectar-eating bird), moved deftly
among the nearby unbagged flowers
on the tree. Using its beak, the
bird reached for a bud and gave
it a quick twist, which released
the four petals. Within a second
after the bud sprang apart, pollen
was catapulted onto the tui's head
as the bird sipped a pool of nectar.
Until this revelation, no one had
known that any New Zealand mistletoes--or
any other New Zealand flowers--relied
on this unusual pollination mechanism.
Flowers that can be popped open
in this way by animals are called
explosive. Various plant families
from different parts of the world
have such flowers, many of which
are easily tripped by the touch
of an insect or even by the wind.
But flowers that require forceful
opening are rarer and must attract
pollinators that know the trick.
From the bird's perspective, explosive
twist-top buds unequivocally signal
the presence of a sweet fast food
(nectar) wrapped in a tamperproof
package. The mistletoe also benefits
from this setup. Sealed buds protect
pollen against rain and mist until
a pollinator is available, and
once it is, the miniexplosion effectively
showers the bird with pollen. The
mistletoe usually ceases to produce
nectar within the flower once it
is opened, thereby encouraging
birds to concentrate on opening
new flowers rather than revisiting
old ones.
In addition to the tui, another
New Zealand species of honeyeater,
known as the bellbird for its clear,
bell-like call, commonly opens
mistletoe flowers. Of the 170 species
of honeyeaters in Australia and
the Pacific Islands, only three--the
tui, the bellbird, and the stitchbird
(the latter surviving only on offshore
islands)--are found in New Zealand.
For their mutually beneficial relationship
to have evolved, the honeyeaters
and the mistletoes with explosive
flowers presumably have been coexisting
for thousands or perhaps millions
of years. Introduced birds, such
as blackbirds and finches (which
are casual nectar feeders), rarely
twist the flowers open. Perhaps
these exotic species have not been
living long enough with mistletoes
in New Zealand to learn the opening
maneuver. Occasionally we have
seen bellbirds trying unsuccessfully
to hasten the opening of the flowers
of yellow mistletoe, or Alepis
flavida, which open on their own.
This suggests that explosive opening
in red and scarlet mistletoe flowers
might have evolved as the birds
sought to be the first to reach
an untapped nectar source.
Two years after their discovery
of the exploding mistletoe flowers,
the team found that birds were
not the only animals that had learned
how to access mistletoe riches.
Several species of native solitary
bees (Hylaeus agilis and various
Leioproctus species) are barely
one-fifth the size of a red mistletoe
bud, but with persistent gnawing
and heaving, they occasionally
manage to pry one open with their
mandibles. The bees are not interested
in nectar; instead, they harvest
pollen and haul it back to their
nests to feed their larvae. In
contrast to the birds' instant
twist-and-sip method, the tiny
bees often take more than a minute
just to release the petals. On
average, they succeed in opening
one bud in every four they attempt
to spring. But their efforts are
generously rewarded. A bee that
manages to jimmy open a mistletoe
bud gets first access to an untapped
store. The New Zealand red mistletoe
is the only plant in the world
with bird-pollinated explosive
flowers that are also opened by
insects. This challenges the common
notion that plants usually have
only one guild of pollinators--for
example, either birds or butterflies,
but not both.
As is the case with the honeyeaters,
only native bees seem to have had
time to learn how to unlock the
mistletoe blossoms; the insects'
introduced counterparts--exotic
honeybees and wasps--have not yet
discovered the trick. The native
bees may be playing a role that
in other parts of the world is
likely to be adopted by other types
of animals. New Zealand has relatively
few pollinators. There are no mammalian
pollinators, and only seven bird,
one bat, sixteen butterfly, and
about forty native solitary bee
species serve New Zealand's flowers.
(Australia, in contrast, is home
to about 3,000 bee species and
110 bird species that are active
pollinators.) Consequently, most
New Zealand flowers either attract
a range of pollinators (a variety
of insects, for example) or are
self-fertile (that is, able to
produce fruits without pollen from
another plant). Red and scarlet
mistletoes' dependence on a few
savvy pollinators came as a surprise.
Also unusual is the flower structure
of red and scarlet mistletoes,
which allows for visits by pollinators
of vastly different sizes. A solitary
bee weighs only one three-thousandth
as much as a bellbird. When a tui
or a bellbird pops open a bud,
all four petals spring back, and
as the bird inserts its beak into
the corolla to drink nectar, its
head often brushes pollen onto
the receptive stigma. If the flower
reacted the same way to a bee's
probings, the insect could easily
gather pollen from the anthers
(the pollen-producing structures)
without ever touching the stigma,
and pollination would be unlikely.
But bees seldom "detonate" flowers
the same way birds do. Instead
the bee makes a small slit in the
end of the bud, creating just enough
room to push its way inside. In
such cramped quarters, the bee
is more likely to touch the stigma--and
pollinate the mistletoe--as it
harvests pollen from the anthers.
Our experiments show that on average,
and despite their size, bees deposit
about the same number of pollen
grains during a single visit as
birds do.
Still, bees are probably not as
important to these mistletoes as
native honeyeaters are, because
the bees enter far fewer flowers.
In addition, red and scarlet mistletoes
depend on birds for seed dispersal.
Peraxilla seeds are small and green
even when ripe. In order for the
seeds contained within the fruit
to germinate and to become established
on a new host tree branch, the
fruit skins must be removed. The
birds devour and digest the fruit
and its skin, then defecate the
seeds, often onto a branch of another
tree. The pulpy seed is surrounded
by a sticky layer that glues it
to the surface on which it lands.
Germinating immediately, the seed
sends out "rootlets" to
tap into the host tree's water
supply.
Because of the mistletoe's reliance
on honeyeaters for both pollination
and dispersal (in addition to the
honeyeaters, only one other bird,
the waxeye, frequently eats the
fruit), mistletoe plants are particularly
subject to reproductive failure
if their avian partners become
scarce or disappear, as has happened
with other indigenous birds. Plants
that maintain less specialized
relationships with their pollinators
can reproduce with the help of
many different insects or various
birds; for them, the loss of any
one species of pollinator is not
so significant. But red and scarlet
mistletoe flowers cannot open without
the help of specific native bird
and bee species, and unopened flowers
have only a 5-10 percent chance
of forming seeds through self-pollination.
Unfertilized flowers end up as
mysterious bottom-opened remnants
on the forest floor.
At the turn of the last century,
botanists reported forests ablaze
with the scarlet blooms of native
mistletoes, but today few areas
of New Zealand support profuse
growth. In most places, unpollinated
dead blooms littering the ground
are more common than flowers twisted
open by birds and bees. Our experiments
have shown that at several sites
in the central Southern Alps of
South Island, mistletoe plants
produce no more fruits than plants
that have been placed inside cages
to keep out pollinators. This means
that birds and bees are visiting
flowers so infrequently--or that
the birds are becoming so scarce--that
essentially there is no increase
at all in pollination over the
low rate of self-pollination. (Birds
may also be dispersing fewer seeds,
although this may be less of a
problem than the decline in pollination;
ripe fruits can wait six weeks
for a bird's visit, while buds
last only six days.) A potential
cycle of decline could begin if
pollination drops to the point
at which these mistletoes become
rare and individual birds lose
the twisting habit or if, over
time, the bird species "forget" how
to access flowers.
The decline of New Zealand mistletoes
is one of a series of ecological
changes stemming from the introduction
of land mammals into plant and
animal communities that evolved
without such creatures. Rats, stoats,
ferrets, cats, and possums have
decimated native animals that were
unaccustomed to mammalian predators.
Native birds in particular have
drastically declined, and some
have been forced to seek refuge
on mammal-free offshore islands.
One mammal I have studied, the
Australian brush-tailed possum,
harms mistletoe in a direct way,
by devouring it. But another cause
of the gradual disappearance of
mistletoes throughout New Zealand
is the elimination of avian pollinators
by mammals. This chain of ecological
events may already have doomed
a close relative of the red and
the scarlet species, the mistletoe
known as Trilepidia adamsii, which
has been extinct since the mid-1950s.
New Zealand has risen to the challenge,
however, and measures are being
taken to control exotics and to
conserve native species, including
honeyeaters and the remaining mistletoes.
No longer a mystery, the fallen
flowers of Ohau have proved to
be the warning sign of a disruption
in a long-standing ecological relationship.
That partnership must be revived
if the newfound pollination phenomenon
itself is to survive in New Zealand.
A Virginia native, Laura A. Sessions
("A Floral Twist of Fate" page
38) traveled to New Zealand in
1996 as a Fulbright scholar. She
earned her master's degree in botany
at New Zealand's University of
Canterbury in Christchurch, studying
the effects of introduced brush-tailed
possums on New Zealand mistletoes.
Along the way, Sessions notes, "I
realized that I enjoy learning
and writing about science more
than I like actually doing it." She
is currently pursuing a doctorate
in science communication and the
media, as well as continuing work
on the effects of introduced animals
in New Zealand. An "introduction" herself,
Sessions says she has come to love
New Zealand's "beautiful
landscapes and relaxed pace of
life."
COPYRIGHT 2000 American Museum
of Natural History
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group
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