| Literature DB >> 32592586 |
Krzysztof Lustofin1, Piotr Świątek2, Piotr Stolarczyk3, Vitor F O Miranda4, Bartosz J Płachno1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Floral food bodies (including edible trichomes) are a form of floral reward for pollinators. This type of nutritive reward has been recorded in several angiosperm families: Annonaceae, Araceae, Calycanthaceae, Eupomatiaceae, Himantandraceae, Nymphaeaceae, Orchidaceae, Pandanaceae and Winteraceae. Although these bodies are very diverse in their structure, their cells contain food material: starch grains, protein bodies or lipid droplets. In Pinguicula flowers, there are numerous multicellular clavate trichomes. Previous authors have proposed that these trichomes in the Pinguicula flower play the role of 'futterhaare' ('feeding hairs') and are eaten by pollinators. The main aim of this study was to investigate whether the floral non-glandular trichomes of Pinguicula contain food reserves and thus are a reward for pollinators. The trichomes from the Pinguicula groups, which differ in their taxonomy (species from the subgenera: Temnoceras, Pinguicula and Isoloba) as well as the types of their pollinators (butterflies/flies and bees/hummingbirds), were examined. Thus, it was determined whether there are any connections between the occurrence of food trichomes and phylogeny position or pollination biology. Additionally, we determined the phylogenetic history of edible trichomes and pollinator evolution in the Pinguicula species.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Pinguiculazzm321990 ; Butterworts; Lentibulariaceae; carnivorous plants; floral micro-morphology; food hairs; spur; trichome structure; trichomes
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32592586 PMCID: PMC7596368 DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcaa123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Bot ISSN: 0305-7364 Impact factor: 4.357
Fig. 1.General morphology and micromorphology of the selected Pinguicula species that were examined. (A–D) General morphology and micromorphology of a P. agnata flower showing the entrance to the flower (En) with multicellular clavate slender trichomes (I), the throat (Th) with multicellular compact thick trichomes (II) in the front and two types of long and slender or short and compact non-glandular trichomes (III) that are located at the entrance to the spur (Sp); note the presence of a pistil (Ps) and a stamen (S) in the throat; scale bars = 2 mm, 2 mm, 1 mm and 1 mm, respectively. (E and F) Micromorphology of a P. gigantea flower; note the similar distribution and micromorphology of the non-glandular trichomes (Iʹ, IIʹ, IIIʹ) compared with P. agnata; scale bars = 1 mm and 1 mm, respectively. (G and H) Micromorphology of the P. rectifolia throat with generative organs and many celled uniseriate slender non-glandular trichomes indicated by an acute apical cell that is located in the throat and basal part of the spur; scale bars = 1 mm and 300 µm, respectively. (I) Micromorphology of the P. hemiepiphytica throat with long and slender multicellular non-glandular trichomes and a stamen; scale bar = 1 mm.
List of the Pinguicula species that were examined along with information regarding their infrageneric classification, the origin of the plant material and the type of pollinator for each species.
| Species | Infrageneric classification | Material origin | Type of pollinator |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Lepidoptera ( |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Lepidoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: near Santiago Juxtlahuaca, Oaxaca, Mexico 1851 m) | Lepidoptera ( |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Lepidoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Lepidoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: near Ixtlan de Juarez, Oaxaca, Mexico, 2209–2535 m.) | Most probably hummingbirds ( |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Cerro Miramundo, El Salvador) | Ornithophily is presumed: a watercolour showing a species of hummingbird visiting a plants of |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Diptera/Hymenoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Mexico) | Diptera/Hymenoptera ( |
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| Botanical Garden in Liberec | Diptera/Hymenoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) |
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| Diptera/Hymenoptera (flower’s structure indicates that type of pollinator) | |
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| Hymenoptera ( | |
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| Hymenoptera ( | |
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| Botanical Garden of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Europa) | Diptera/Hymenoptera(?), self-pollination ( |
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| Herbarium of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Alps, Innsbruck, Austria; KRA 0299930) | Diptera/Hymenoptera ( |
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| Herbarium of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Małe Pieniny, Rezerwat Zaskalskie, Poland; KRA 71415) | Diptera/Hymenoptera ( |
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| Herbarium of Jagiellonian University in Cracow (collected from: Dąbrowa Górnicza, użytek ekologiczny ‘Młaki and Pogorią I’, Poland; KRA 0138573) |
Fig. 4.Phylogeny of the Pinguicula species based on the Bayesian inference (BI), maximum likelihood (ML) and maximum parsimony (MP) analyses of the trnK/matK sequences. The numbers above the branches refer to the BI posterior probability and the ML bootstrap support, respectively, and below the MP, the bootstrap support. The animal silhouettes denote the pollinator for each species. ‘*’ indicates the homoplastic origin of the ornithophily for P. hemiepiphytica and P. laueana independently. ‘+’ or ‘–’ indicate the presence/absence of starch grains in the edible trichomes of the bee-/fly-pollinated species.
Fig. 2.Structure of the non-glandular trichomes. (A) Section through the P. albida multicellular thick compact non-glandular trichomes that are located in the throat; note the numerous starch grains (asterisk); scale bar = 10 µm. (B) Naphthol blue black staining of a P. moctezumae multicellular non-glandular trichome showing the presence of a nucleus with a paracrystalline protein inclusion (arrow); note there are no protein bodies in the cytoplasm; scale bar = 10 µm. (C and D) Ultrastructure of a cell of a P. agnata non-glandular trichome; note the mitochondrion (M), nucleus (N) and prominent cuticular striations (arrowhead); scale bars = 0.7 µm and 0.5 µm, respectively. (E and F) Micromorphology of a P. agnata multicellular compact thick non-glandular trichome that is located in the front of the throat; note the cuticular striations on the surface of the apical cells (ap) and the smooth cuticle surface of the basal cell (bc); scale bars = 50 µm and 100 µm, respectively.
Fig. 3.PAS reaction and Lugol’s staining of the Pinguicula species that were examined, which contain amyloplasts with starch grains (arrow, inserts) inside various types of non-glandular trichomes. (A–C) P. agnata; scale bars = 10 µm, 10 µm, 50 µm, respectively. (D and E) P. albida; scale bars = 10 µm and 50 µm, respectively. (F) P. ibarrae; scale bar = 50 µm. (G) P. martinezii; scale bar = 50 µm. (H) P. filifolia; scale bar = 50 µm. (I) P. gigantea; scale bar = 50 µm.
Fig. 5.Histochemistry of the flower non-glandular trichomes from the species belonging to the Pinguicula and Isoloba subgenera; note the numerous starch grains inside the pollen grains (arrow). (A) Herbarium material of the P. alpina (KRA 0299930) that were examined. (B and C) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. alpina non-glandular trichomes; scale bars = 100 µm and 50 µm, respectively. (D) Herbarium material of the P. vulgaris subsp. vulgaris (KRA 71415) that were examined. (E and F) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. vulgaris subsp. vulgaris non-glandular trichomes; note the pollen grains (arrow) with a positive staining of the starch grains inside; scale bars = 100 µm and 100 µm, respectively. (G) Herbarium material of the P. vulgaris subsp. bicolor (KRA 0138573) that were examined. (H and I) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. vulgaris subsp. bicolor non-glandular trichomes; note the pollen grains (arrow) with a positive staining of the starch grains inside; scale bars = 100 µm and 100 µm, respectively. (J–L) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. lusitanica non-glandular trichomes; scale bars = 50 µm, 50 µm and 50 µm, respectively.
Fig. 6.PAS reaction and Lugol’s staining of various non-glandular trichomes of the Pinguicula species that were examined that are pollinated by Lepidoptera; note the pollen grains (arrow) with a positive staining of the starch grains inside. (A) PAS reaction of the P. moctezumae non-glandular trichomes that are located in the basal part of the spur; scale bar = 50 µm. (B and C) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. moctezumae non-glandular trichomes; scale bars = 50 µm and 100 µm, respectively. (D) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. esseriana non-glandular trichomes; scale bar = 100 µm. (E) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. moranensis non-glandular trichomes; scale bar = 100 µm. (F) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. emarginata non-glandular trichomes; scale bar = 100 µm. (G) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. rectifolia non-glandular trichomes; scale bar = 100 µm.
Fig. 7.PAS reaction and Lugol’s staining of various non-glandular trichomes of the Pinguicula species that were examined that are most probably pollinated by hummingbirds. (A) PAS reaction of a P. mesophytica non-glandular trichome; scale bar = 50 µm. (B) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. mesophytica non-glandular trichomes; scale bar = 100 µm. (C and D) Negative result of the Lugol’s staining of the P. hemiepiphytica non-glandular trichomes; scale bars = 100 µm and 100 µm, respectively.
Fig. 8.Naphthol blue black (NBB) staining of various non-glandular trichomes of the selected Pinguicula species that were examined; note the lack of protein bodies in the cytoplasm. Nucleus (asterisk). (A) P. agnata; scale bar = 50 µm. (B) P. albida; scale bar = 50 µm. (C) P. esseriana; scale bar = 50 µm. (D) P. vulgaris; scale bar = 50 µm.
Fig. 9.Sudan III staining of various non-glandular trichomes of the selected Pinguicula species that were examined; note the positive staining of the cuticular striations of the non-glandular trichomes cells (arrow, insert and arrowhead) and lipids inside the pollen grains (asterisk). (A) P. agnata; scale bar = 100 µm. (B) P. rectifolia; scale bar = 100 µm. (C) P. moranensis; scale bar = 100 µm. (D) P. esseriana; scale bar = 100 µm. (E) P. hemiepiphytica; scale bar = 100 µm. (F) P. mesophytica; scale bar = 100 µm.