Literature DB >> 17083676

The chemical nature of fetid floral odours in stapeliads (Apocynaceae-Asclepiadoideae-Ceropegieae).

Andreas Jürgens1, Stefan Dötterl, Ulrich Meve.   

Abstract

By emitting strong fetid scents, sapromyiophilous flowers mimic brood and food sites of flies to attract them as pollinators. To date, intensive comparative scent analyses have been restricted to sapromyiophilous Araceae. Here, we analysed flower volatiles of fetid stapeliads to improve our understanding of the floral biology of fly pollinated species, and to learn whether mimicry types comparable to those found in Araceae exist. Floral volatiles of 15 species out of 11 genera within the Asclepiadoideae-Ceropegieae-Stapeliinae were collected via headspace adsorption and thermal desorption and analysed by gas chromatography-mass spectometry (GC-MS). Data were analysed using CNESS-NMDS statistics. Sapromyiophilous stapeliads are highly diverse in their scent composition, in which sulphur compounds, benzenoids, fatty acid derivatives or nitrogen-containing compounds dominate. Four groups are evident: species with high p-cresol content but low amounts of polysulphides (herbivore faeces mimicry); species with mainly polysulphides and low amounts of p-cresol (carnivore/omnivore faeces or carcass mimicry); species with high amounts of heptanal and octanal (carnivore/omnivore faeces or carcass mimicry); and species with hexanoic acid (urine mimicry). Considering the findings in the unrelated Araceae, our results support the universality of different mimicry types that are obviously subsumed under the sapromyiophilous syndrome.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17083676     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2006.01845.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  35 in total

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2.  Mimicking Livor Mortis: a Well-Known but Unsubstantiated Color Profile in Sapromyiophily.

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3.  Floral volatiles in a sapromyiophilous plant and their importance in attracting house fly pollinators.

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5.  Fly pollination in Ceropegia (Apocynaceae: Asclepiadoideae): biogeographic and phylogenetic perspectives.

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6.  Sources of floral scent variation: can environment define floral scent phenotype?

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7.  Spore dispersal of fetid Lysurus mokusin by feces of mycophagous insects.

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8.  Carrion mimicry in a South African orchid: flowers attract a narrow subset of the fly assemblage on animal carcasses.

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Review 9.  The role of metals in mammalian olfaction of low molecular weight organosulfur compounds.

Authors:  Eric Block; Victor S Batista; Hiroaki Matsunami; Hanyi Zhuang; Lucky Ahmed
Journal:  Nat Prod Rep       Date:  2017-05-10       Impact factor: 13.423

10.  The impact of biochemistry vs. population membership on floral scent profiles in colour polymorphic Hesperis matronalis.

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