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BEETLE POLLINATION OF DIEFFENBACHIA LONGISPATHA (ARACEAE)
Authors:Helen J Young
Institution:Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York, 11794
Abstract:Dieffenbachia is an monoecious understory herb of tropical rain forests that exhibits a complex and specialized relationship with its beetle pollinators. The erect protogynous inflorescence has the spadix divided, with the female flowers in the basal half and male flowers in the upper half. Dieffenbachia longispatha Engler & Krause is pollinated by scarab beetles in the genera Cyclocephala and Erioscelis. The enveloping spathe of the inflorescence opens in the evening, but no flowers are sexually functional until the stigmas become receptive about 24 hr later. Beetles fly to the inflorescence in darkness, suggesting that floral odors play a role as an attractant. Beetles remain in the inflorescence for 24 hr, eating protein-rich staminodia that surround the stigmas. On the evening of the third day the anthers dehisce and beetles become covered with pollen as they crawl up the spadix in the process of leaving. Beetles fly an average of 80 m between inflorescences, usually to the nearest female inflorescence, although distances of 400–1,000 m have been observed. Minimal estimate of genetic neighborhood sizes are large for D. longispatha (750 to 8,900 plants) and neighborhood areas encompass 41,000 to 67,000 m2. Experiments demonstrate that the species is self-compatible and that fruit production is pollinator limited.
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