2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.sajb.2010.07.022
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Scent chemistry and pollinator attraction in the deceptive trap flowers of Ceropegia dolichophylla

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Cited by 41 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…The fly pollinators of Ceropegia belong to diverse families, but, typically, only species of a single or a few fly families interact with a single species of Ceropegia (Ollerton et al, 2009). This specificity is likely due to distinct floral scents, which are responsible for pollinator attraction (Vogel, 1961;Heiduk et al, 2010). It was suggested that the flowers mimic rotting plant material, male sex pheromones or animal related odors, leading to the idea that pollinating flies are attracted by chemical deceit (Vogel, 1961;Ollerton et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fly pollinators of Ceropegia belong to diverse families, but, typically, only species of a single or a few fly families interact with a single species of Ceropegia (Ollerton et al, 2009). This specificity is likely due to distinct floral scents, which are responsible for pollinator attraction (Vogel, 1961;Heiduk et al, 2010). It was suggested that the flowers mimic rotting plant material, male sex pheromones or animal related odors, leading to the idea that pollinating flies are attracted by chemical deceit (Vogel, 1961;Ollerton et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have speculated that male flowers of A. muelleri is unlikely playing important role on seed production, but more prominent from ecological point of views like in other species (Kite and Hetterschieid, 1997;Heiduk et al, 2010;Gottsberger et al, 2012) because many Nitidulidae insects visited the spadix, mated and foraged pollen during anthesis.…”
Section: Morphometric Characters Of Flowersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the roles of flies (Diptera) as pollinators of angiosperms has been long recognised, being considered the second most import order of insects for pollination after the Hymenoptera (Larson et al 2001), small flies, including both the Chloropidae and Milichiidae, are rarely recorded visiting flowers and their association with flowers is often overlooked (Larson et al 2001). The Chloropidae and Milichiidae have been identified as pollinators of species from several families in addition to the Orchidaceae including the Apocynaceae (including Asclepiadaceae), Aristolochiaceae and Araceae (Proctor et al, 1996, Borba and Semir 2001, Heiduk et al 2010and Oelschlägel et al 2014). The known mechanisms by which myophilous flowers within these families attract flies is discussed below.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many deceptive fly pollinated flowers in the Aristolochiaceae and Araceae are protogynous with elaborate trap mechanisms that detain flies, sometimes for up to 24 hours, while the flower transitions between female and male phases, first being pollinated and then releasing pollen onto the same flies after the stigmas are no longer receptive (Proctor et al, 1996). Heiduk et al (2010) suggest that the floral scent of Ceropegia dolichophylla (Apocynaceae), which was found to include known insect alarm pheromones, attracts kleptoparasitic milichiid flies as pollinators by mimicking their feeding sites on dead and dying insects. Recently, Oelschlägel et al (2014) demonstrated pollination of the trap flower Aristolochia rotunda mainly by deception of female kleptoparasitic chloropids that normally feed on the leaking hemolymph of mirid bugs freshly killed by predatory insects or spiders.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%