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Chemical imitation of yeast fermentation by the drosophilid-pollinated deceptive trap-flower Aristolochia baetica (Aristolochiaceae)

Authors :
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft / German Research Foundation (DFG)
Rupp, Thomas
Oelschlägel, Birgit
Berjano Pérez, Regina
Mahfoud, Hafez
Buono, Daniele
Wenke, Torsten
Rabitsch, Katharina
Dötterl, Stefan
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Biología Vegetal y Ecología
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft / German Research Foundation (DFG)
Rupp, Thomas
Oelschlägel, Birgit
Berjano Pérez, Regina
Mahfoud, Hafez
Buono, Daniele
Wenke, Torsten
Rabitsch, Katharina
Dötterl, Stefan
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Deceptive flowers, unlike in mutualistic pollination systems, mislead their pollinators by advertising rewards which ultimately are not provided. Although our understanding of deceptive pollination systems increased in recent years, the attractive signals and deceptive strategies in the majority of species remain unknown. This is also true for the genus Aristolochia, famous for its deceptive and fly-pollinated trap flowers. Representatives of this genus were generally assumed to be oviposition-site mimics, imitating vertebrate carrion or mushrooms. However, recent studies found a broader spectrum of strategies, including kleptomyiophily and imitation of invertebrate carrion. A different deceptive strategy is presented here for the western Mediterranean Aristolochia baetica L. We found that this species is mostly pollinated by drosophilid flies (Drosophilidae, mostly Drosophila spp.), which typically feed on fermenting fruit infested by yeasts. The flowers of A. baetica emitted mostly typical yeast volatiles, predominantly the aliphatic compounds acetoin and 2,3-butandiol, and derived acetates, as well as the aromatic compound 2-phenylethanol. Analyses of the absolute configurations of the chiral volatiles revealed weakly (acetoin, 2,3-butanediol) to strongly (mono- and diacetates) biased stereoisomer-ratios. Electrophysiological (GC-EAD) experiments and lab bioassays demonstrated that most of the floral volatiles, although not all stereoisomers of chiral compounds, were physiologically active and attractive in drosophilid pollinators; a synthetic mixture thereof successfully attracted them in field and lab bioassays. We conclude that A. baetica chemically mimics yeast fermentation to deceive its pollinators. This deceptive strategy (scent chemistry, pollinators, trapping function) is also known from more distantly related plants, such as Arum palaestinum Boiss. (Araceae) and Ceropegia spp. (Apocynaceae), suggesting convergent evolution. In contrast to other studies

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442718080
Document Type :
Electronic Resource