Orchids: The Masters Of Lying, Cheating & Stealing
Thanks to Curtin University and the
University of Western Australia for sponsoring this video. Also, special thanks to
Kingsley Dixon and the
Orchid Specialist Group of the
IUCN’s
Species Survival Commission.
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If you want to learn more about this topic, here are some handy keywords to get your googling started:
– Mycelium
– Mycorrizhae: a fungus that grows in association with the roots of a plant in a symbiotic or mildly pathogenic relationship.
– Mycoheterotroph: A plant that is completely reliant on fungus for all of its nutrition.
–
Sexual deception: A trick used by numerous orchid species of looking and/or smelling like female insects in order to draw male insects to their flowers (for pollination)
–
Food deception:
Rather than offering pollinators real food rewards (such as nectar or pollen), some orchids merely mimic the looks and smells of other, nearby flowers that offer such rewards.
– Pollinia: In most flowering plants, pollen is a powdery substance made up of tons of individual pollen grains. But orchids pack their grains into a couple of sticky sacks (pollinia) instead.
– Epiphyte: A plant that grows harmlessly upon another plant. Lots of tropical orchids are epiphytes
– Lithophyte: A plant that grows on rocks
Species Featured in this video:
-
Phantom Orchid (
Cephalanthera austiniae)
-
Bee orchid (
Ophrys apifera)
-
Fly orchid (
Ophrys insectifera)
-
Mirror orchid (
Ophrys speculum)
-
Red Helleborine Orchid (
Cephalanthera rubra)
-
Nettle-leaved bellflower (
Campanula trachelium)
-
Hammer orchid (
Drakaea glyptodon)
-
Wasp (Zaspilothynnus trilobatus)
-
Lady's slipper orchids (
Cypripedium calceolus)
-
Dracula orchids (Dracula terborchii and Dracula andreettae)
-
Spider orchids (
Genus Caladenia)
-
Cigar Orchid (Cyrtopodium punctatum)
-
Venus slipper (Paphiopedilum Maudiae)
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Credits (and Twitter handles):
Script Writer:
Peter Reich
Script Editor:
Emily Elert (@eelert)
Video Illustrators: Omkar
Bhagat (@TheCuriousEnggr) and
Ever Salazar (@eversalazar)
Video
Director: Emily Elert (@eelert)
Video
Narrator: Emily Elert (@eelert)
With Contributions From:
Henry Reich,
Alex Reich,
Kate Yoshida,
Rachel Becker and
David Goldenberg
Music by:
Nathaniel Schroeder:
http://www.soundcloud.com/drschroeder
Image Credits:
Phantom Orchid -
Miguel Vieira
Ophrys apifera -
Hans Hillewaert
Ophrys insectifera - Bernd Haynold
Ophrys speculum -
Wikimedia user
Esculapio
Cephalanthera rubra and Campanula trachelium - Olivier Pichard
Hammer Orchid
Animation based on Photos by Rod Peakall
Lady Slipper Orchid - Flickr user ladydragonflyherworld
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References:
Cameron DD, Johnson I,
Read DJ, Leake JR. 2008.
Giving and receiving: measuring the carbon cost of mycorrhizas in the green orchid,
Goodyera repens.
New Phytologist 180: 176–184.
Cameron DD, Leake JR, Read DJ.
2006. Mutualistic mycorrhiza in orchids: evidence from plant-fungus carbon and nitrogen transfers in the green- leaved terrestrial orchid Goodyera repens. New Phytologist 171:
405–416.
Cameron DD, Preiss K, Gebauer G, Read DJ. 2009. The chlorophyll containing orchid
Corallorhiza trifida derives little carbon through photosynthesis. New Phytologist
183: 358–
364.
Givnish,
T. J., Spalink, D.,
Ames, M.,
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Hopper,
S. D., &
Brown,
A. P. (
2007). A revision of
Australia' s hammer orchids (Drakaea: Orchidaceae), with some field data on species-specific sexually deceived wasp pollinators.
Aust. Systematic Bot.
Australian Systematic Botany, 20(3), 252. Retrieved April 28, 2016, from https://goo.gl/3l7Yuv.
IUCN Red List of
Threatened Species. http://goo.gl/3tzFuC.Accessed online April 27, 2016.
Koopowitz, H
.. (
1992). A STOCHASTIC
MODEL FOR THE EXTINCTION OF TROPICAL ORCHIDS.
Selbyana,13, 115–122. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/41759800
Mccormick,
M. K.,
Taylor,
D. L., Juhaszova, K.,
Burnett,
R. K., Whigham,
D. F., &
O’Neill,
J. P. (
2012). Limitations on orchid recruitment: Not a simple picture.
Molecular Ecology, 21(6), 1511-1523. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294x.2012.05468.x
Merckx, V. and Freudenstein,
J. V. (
2010),
Evolution of mycoheterotrophy in plants: a phylogenetic perspective. New Phytologist, 185: 605–609. Retrieved April 28, 2016, from http://goo.gl/CvCQOX)
Rasmussen, Hanne N., and
Finn N. Rasmussen. "
Orchid mycorrhiza: implications of a mycophagous life style." Oikos
118.3 (2009): 334-345.