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1.
Mutualistic relationships between vertebrates and plants apart from the pollen and seed-dispersal syndromes are rare. At first view, carnivorous pitcher plants of the genus Nepenthes seem to be highly unlikely candidates for mutualistic interactions with animals, as they form dimorphic terrestrial and aerial pitchers that trap arthropods and small vertebrates. Surprisingly, however, the aerial pitchers of Nepenthes rafflesiana variety elongata are poor insect traps, with low amounts of insect-attractive volatile compounds and low amounts of digestive fluid. Here, we show that N. rafflesiana elongata gains an estimated 33.8 per cent of the total foliar nitrogen from the faeces of Hardwicke's woolly bats (Kerivoula hardwickii hardwickii) that exclusively roost in its aerial pitchers. This is the first case in which the faeces-trapping syndrome has been documented in a pitcher plant that attracts bats and only the second case of a mutualistic association between a carnivorous plant and a mammal to date.  相似文献   

2.
Three species of Nepenthes pitcher plants (Nepenthes rajah, Nepenthes lowii and Nepenthes macrophylla) specialize in harvesting nutrients from tree shrew excreta in their pitchers. In all three species, nectaries on the underside of the pitcher lid are the focus of the tree shrews' attention. Tree shrews are dichromats, with visual sensitivity in the blue and green wavebands. All three Nepenthes species were shown to produce visual signals, in which the underside of the pitcher lid (the area of highest nectar production) stood out in high contrast to the adjacent area on the pitcher (i.e., was brighter), in the blue and green wavebands visible to the tree shrews. N. rajah showed the tightest degree of “tuning,” notably in the green waveband. Conversely, pitchers of Nepenthes burbidgeae, a typical insectivorous species sympatric with N. rajah, did not produce a color pattern tuned to tree shrew sensitivity maxima.  相似文献   

3.
Nepenthes is the largest genus of pitcher plants, with its center of diversity in SE Asia. The plants grow in substrates that are deficient in N and offset this deficiency by trapping animal prey, primarily arthropods. Recent research has provided new insights into the function of the pitchers, particularly with regard to prey tapping and retention. Species examined to date use combinations of wettable peristomes, wax layers and viscoelastic fluid to trap and retain prey. In many respects, this has redefined our understanding of the functioning of Nepenthes pitchers. In addition, recent research has shown that several Nepenthes species target specific groups of prey animals, or are even evolving away from a strictly carnivorous mode of operation. Future research into nutrient sequestration strategies and mechanisms of prey attraction would no doubt further enhance our knowledge of the ecology of this remarkable genus.Key words: carnivory, mutualism, Nepenthes, pitcher plants  相似文献   

4.
Nepenthes pitcher plants are typically carnivorous, producing pitchers with varying combinations of epicuticular wax crystals, viscoelastic fluids and slippery peristomes to trap arthropod prey, especially ants. However, ant densities are low in tropical montane habitats, thereby limiting the potential benefits of the carnivorous syndrome. Nepenthes lowii, a montane species from Borneo, produces two types of pitchers that differ greatly in form and function. Pitchers produced by immature plants conform to the ‘typical’ Nepenthes pattern, catching arthropod prey. However, pitchers produced by mature N. lowii plants lack the features associated with carnivory and are instead visited by tree shrews, which defaecate into them after feeding on exudates that accumulate on the pitcher lid. We tested the hypothesis that tree shrew faeces represent a significant nitrogen (N) source for N. lowii, finding that it accounts for between 57 and 100 per cent of foliar N in mature N. lowii plants. Thus, N. lowii employs a diversified N sequestration strategy, gaining access to a N source that is not available to sympatric congeners. The interaction between N. lowii and tree shrews appears to be a mutualism based on the exchange of food sources that are scarce in their montane habitat.  相似文献   

5.
Carnivorous syndrome in Asian pitcher plants of the genus Nepenthes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Pitcher plants Nepenthes alata and N. mirabilis are carnivorous species with leaves composed of a photosynthetic part (lamina) and a pitcher trap. This characteristic permitted direct physiological and anatomical comparison between these two distinct parts of the leaves to determine those features involved in the 'carnivorous syndrome', which include low net photosynthetic assimilation rate (A(N)) and low photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (PNUE). METHODS: Photosynthetic rate (A(N)) and respiration rate (R(d)) were measured gasometrically, chlorophyll concentration was determined spectrophotometrically and nitrogen concentration was determined using a CHN elemental analyser in lamina and trap separately. Anatomy of N. alata was observed using light, fluorescence and transmission electron microscopy. A(N), foliar nitrogen and chlorophyll concentration were also compared with values for other carnivorous plant species (genera Sarracenia, Drosera) that combine both autotrophic and carnivorous functions into the same physical organ. KEY RESULTS: It was found that the A(N) in Nepenthes lamina was low and PNUE was only slightly higher or similar in comparison with other carnivorous plants. It was not observed that the pitcher had a higher R(d) than the lamina, but A(N) in the pitcher was significantly lower than in the lamina. Nepenthes possesses a cluster of characters that could result in reduced photosynthesis in the pitcher and be responsible for carnivorous function of the leaf: replacement of chlorophyll-containing cells with digestive glands, low chlorophyll and nitrogen concentration, compact mesophyll with a small portion of intercellular spaces, absence of palisade parenchyma and low stomatal density. CONCLUSION: Low photosynthetic capacity, nitrogen efficiency, chlorophyll and nitrogen concentration of Nepenthes pitchers was found, together with a set of features that characterized the carnivorous syndrome. Dual use of leaves for photosynthesis and nutrient gain can decrease photosynthetic efficiency in carnivorous plants in general.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Scarcity of essential nutrients has led plants to evolve alternative nutritional strategies, such as myrmecotrophy (ant-waste-derived nutrition) and carnivory (invertebrate predation). The carnivorous plant Nepenthes bicalcarata grows in the Bornean peatswamp forests and is believed to have a mutualistic relationship with its symbiotic ant Camponotus schmitzi. However, the benefits provided by the ant have not been quantified. We tested the hypothesis of a nutritional mutualism, using foliar isotopic and reflectance analyses and by comparing fitness-related traits between ant-inhabited and uninhabited plants. Plants inhabited by C. schmitzi produced more leaves of greater area and nitrogen content than unoccupied plants. The ants were estimated to provide a 200% increase in foliar nitrogen to adult plants. Inhabited plants also produced more and larger pitchers containing higher prey biomass. C. schmitzi-occupied pitchers differed qualitatively in containing C. schmitzi wastes and captured large ants and flying insects. Pitcher abortion rates were lower in inhabited plants partly because of herbivore deterrence as herbivory-aborted buds decreased with ant occupation rate. Lower abortion was also attributed to ant nutritional service. The ants had higher δ(15)N values than any tested prey, and foliar δ(15)N increased with ant occupation rate, confirming their predatory behaviour and demonstrating their direct contribution to the plant-recycled N. We estimated that N. bicalcarata derives on average 42% of its foliar N from C. schmitzi wastes, (76% in highly-occupied plants). According to the Structure Independent Pigment Index, plants without C. schmitzi were nutrient stressed compared to both occupied plants, and pitcher-lacking plants. This attests to the physiological cost of pitcher production and poor nutrient assimilation in the absence of the symbiont. Hence C. schmitzi contributes crucially to the nutrition of N. bicalcarata, via protection of assimilatory organs, enhancement of prey capture, and myrmecotrophy. This combination of carnivory and myrmecotrophy represents an outstanding strategy of nutrient sequestration.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanisms that improve prey richness in carnivorous plants may involve three crucial phases of trapping:attraction, capture and retention.Nepenthes rafflesiana var. typica is an insectivorous pitcher plant that is widespread in northern Borneo.It exhibits ontogenetic pitcher dimorphism with the upper pitchers trapping more flying prey than the lower pitchers.While this difference in prey composition has been ascribed to differences in attraction,the contribution of capture and retention has been overlooked.This study focused on distinguishing between the prey trapping mechanisms, and assessing their relative contribution to prey diversity.Arthropod richness and diversity of both visitors and prey in the two types of pitchers were analysed to quantify the relative contribution of attraction to prey trapping.Rate of insect visits to the different pitcher parts and the presence or absence of a sweet fragrance was recorded to clarify the origin and mechanism of attraction.The mechanism of retention was studied by insect bioassays and measurements of fluid viscosity. Nepenthes rafflesiana was found to trap a broader prey spectrum than that previously described for any Nepenthes species,with the upper pitchers attracting and trapping a greater quantity and diversity of prey items than the lower pitchers.Capture efficiency was low compared with attraction or retention efficiency.Fragrance of the peristome,or nectar rim,accounted mainly for the observed non-specific, better prey attraction by the upper pitchers, while the retentive properties of the viscous fluid in these upper pitchers arguably explains the species richness of their flying prey.The pitchers of N. rafflesiana are therefore more than simple pitfall traps and the digestive fluid plays an important yet unsuspected role in the ecological success of the species.  相似文献   

9.
Prey capture and digestion in Nepenthes spp. through their leaf-evolved biological traps involve a sequence of exciting events. Sugar-rich nectar, aroma chemicals, narcotic alkaloid secretions, slippery wax crystals, and other biochemicals take part in attracting, capturing, and digesting preys in Nepenthes pitchers. Here we report the distribution of three potent naphthoquinones in Nepenthes khasiana and their roles in prey capture. Plumbagin was first detected in N. khasiana, and its content (root: 1.33 ± 0.02%, dry wt.) was the highest found in any natural source. Chitin induction enhanced plumbagin levels in N. khasiana (root: 2.17 ± 0.02%, dry wt.). Potted N. khasiana plants with limited growth of roots and aerial parts, showed higher levels of plumbagin accumulation (root: 1.92 ± 0.02%; root, chitin induction: 3.30 ± 0.21%, dry wt.) compared with field plants. Plumbagin, a known toxin, insect ecdysis inhibitor, and antimicrobial, was also found embedded in the waxy layers at the top prey capture region of N. khasiana pitchers. Chitin induction, mimicking prey capture, produced droserone and 5-O-methyl droserone in N. khasiana pitcher fluid. Both these naphthoquinone derivatives provide antimicrobial protection to the pitcher fluid from visiting preys. A two-way barrier was found between plumbagin and its two derivatives. Plumbagin was never detected in the pitcher fluid whereas both its derivatives were only found in the pitcher fluid on chitin induction or prey capture. The three naphthoquinones, plumbagin, droserone, and 5-O-methyl droserone, act as molecular triggers in prey capture and digestion in the carnivorous plant, N. khasiana.  相似文献   

10.
Interspecific relationships such as mutualism and parasitism are major drivers of biodiversity. Because such interactions often comprise more than two species, ecological studies increasingly focus on complex multispecies systems. However, the spatial heterogeneity of multi-species interactions is often poorly understood. Here, we investigate the unusual interaction of a bat (Kerivoula hardwickii hardwickii) and two pitcher plant species (Nepenthes hemsleyana and N. bicalcarata) whose pitchers serve as roost for bats. Nepenthes hemsleyana offers roosts of higher quality, indicated by a more stable microclimate compared to N. bicalcarata but occurs at lower abundance and is less common than the latter. Whereas N. hemsleyana benefits from the roosting bats by gaining nitrogen from their feces, the bats’ interaction with N. bicalcarata seems to be commensal or even parasitic. Bats stayed longer in roosts of higher quality provided by N. hemsleyana and preferred them to pitchers of N. bicalcarata in a disturbance experiment. Moreover, bats roosting only in pitchers of N. hemsleyana had a higher body condition and were less infested with parasites compared to bats roosting in pitchers of N. bicalcarata. Our study shows how the local supply of roosts with different qualities affects the behavior and status of their inhabitants and—as a consequence—how the demand of the inhabitants can influence evolutionary adaptations of the roost providing species.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Three species of Nepenthes pitcher plants from Borneo engage in a mutualistic interaction with mountain tree shrews, the basis of which is the exchange of nutritional resources. The plants produce modified “toilet pitchers” that produce copious amounts of exudates, the latter serving as a food source for tree shrews. The exudates are only accessible to the tree shrews when they position their hindquarters over the pitcher orifice. Tree shrews mark valuable resources with feces and regularly defecate into the pitchers when they visit them to feed. Feces represent a valuable source of nitrogen for these Nepenthes species, but there are many facets of the mutualism that are yet to be investigated. These include, but are not limited to, seasonal variation in exudate production rates by the plants, behavioral ecology of visiting tree shrews and the mechanism by which the plants signal to tree shrews that their pitchers represent a food source. Further research into this extraordinary animal-plant interaction is required to gain a better understanding of the benefits to the participating species.Key words: Nepenthes, tree shrew, nitrogen sequestration, mutualism, animal-plant interactionsThe pitcher plant genus Nepenthes comprises approximately 120 species, with the centre of diversity lying in the perhumid tropics of Southeast Asia. All species are vines or subscandent shrubs that produce highly modified leaf organs (“pitchers”) which typically attract, trap, retain and digest arthropods for nutritional benefit. The pitchers of almost all Nepenthes species share the same physical components,1 including the pitcher cup, the peristome and the lid. The pitcher cup usually consists of two main sections: an upper zone which is often covered with wax crystals and anisotropically-oriented semilunate cells2,3 that assist in the capture and retention of prey; and a lower portion, which contains fluid and is lined with digestive glands.2,3 The peristome is a ridge of hardened tissue that lines the orifice. Its anisotropic, wettable surface plays a key role in prey capture.4,5 In most species, the lid is a broad, flat structure which overhangs the orifice and prevents the entry of rainwater which, if unimpeded, can cause the pitchers to overflow, thereby losing digestive enzymes and the products of their activities. The lid is often brightly coloured, has many nectar glands on its surfaces and plays an important role in prey attraction.2The degree of development and/or modification of each pitcher component varies substantially among (and even within) Nepenthes species2,6,7 and recent research has demonstrated that unique modifications to pitcher structure possessed by several species play important roles in specialized nutrient acquisition strategies.812 One such species, Nepenthes lowii, demonstrates a remarkable nitrogen sequestration strategy, in which mountain tree shrews (Tupaia montana) defecate into its pitchers while feeding on exudates secreted by glands on the inner surface of the pitcher lid. Feces accounts for 57–100% of foliar nitrogen in this species13 and N. lowii “toilet pitchers” are ineffective arthropod traps. The large orifices and reflexed, concave lids of N. lowii pitchers induce T. montana to sit astride the pitcher whilst feeding, facilitating fecal deposition.Chin et al.14 found that two other montane species from Borneo, Nepenthes rajah and Nepenthes macrophylla, also trap tree shrew feces. Detailed analysis of trap geometry revealed that these two species and N. lowii share a unique arrangement of trap characteristics that was not detected by earlier studies on the genus. This involves the production of pitchers with very large orifices, large, concave lids that are reflexed approximately 90° away from the orifice and lid glands that produce copious exudates.14 The distance from the front of the pitcher orifice to the inner surface of the lid precisely matches the head + body length of T. montana, resulting in the tree shrews'' food source being positioned behind the pitcher orifice and ensuring that the animals'' hindquarters are positioned over the orifice while they feed on the lid gland exudates.Thus, N. lowii, N. macrophylla and N. rajah are all engaged in a mutualism with T. montana, the basis of which is the exchange of nutritional resources that are scarce in these species'' habitats. The interaction with T. montana is facilitated by trap geometry, but all three Nepenthes species produce pitchers that differ substantially in structure, apart from the shared characteristics outlined above.14 Through a series of modifications to trap structure and geometry—none of which appears to have compromised their ability to trap arthropod prey—N. rajah and N. macrophylla benefit from a highly specialised nitrogen sequestration strategy that is not available to congeners other than N. lowii.Although Clarke et al.13 demonstrated that N. lowii derives nutritional benefit from T. montana feces, there are many facets of the association that have yet to be investigated and the discoveries of Chin et al.14 give rise to a number avenues for further research, several of which are discussed below.The behavioral ecology of T. montana with respect to Nepenthes has not been studied in detail. We do not know whether individual tree shrews defend valuable pitchers against other animals or whether such resources are shared. However, video footage, showing T. montana scent-marking a toilet pitcher of N. lowii after feeding from it, supports the former scenario (Clarke et al.13 and Suppl. video). It is not known whether or how, the plants signal to tree shrews that their pitchers provide a nutritional resource (or even how valuable that resource is—the composition and nutritional value of the lid gland exudates has not been determined). When newly-formed pitchers first open, their tissues generally remain soft for several days while they undergo rapid expansion during the final stages of development.1 During this period, the pitchers are incapable of supporting a tree shrew without suffering significant damage, yet few pitchers of N. lowii, N. macrophylla or N. rajah that we observed exhibited signs of such damage. One possible explanation for this is that the plants signal the tree shrews to indicate whether or not individual pitchers are “open for business.” This might be achieved using variations in color: Tupaia spp. are dichromatic, with sensitivity maxima at ca. 440 and 550–560 nm15 and the pitchers of all three feces-trapping Nepenthes species utilize combinations of green, red, yellow, orange and purple pigments, which change as individual pitchers age.1 In N. lowii, the inner surfaces of the feces-trapping pitchers are uniformly dark purple when mature, but when they first open, they are unevenly covered with purple, pink and green patches. The production of copious lid gland exudates in N. lowii appears to commence after the pitchers have hardened and the uniform dark purple color has developed on the inner surfaces.The study by Chin et al.14 was based on a series of three field trips to northern Borneo that were conducted in March, April and May 2009. The first of these two visits took place during the wet season and heavy rain fell on most days throughout these months. In contrast, May was unusually dry. During this period, many N. rajah plants exhibited signs of stress due to lack of water, including wilting or senescence of developing pitchers and inflorescences. This coincided with an apparent (but unquantified) decline in the number of pitchers that received tree shrew feces: whereas such pitchers were relatively easy to locate during our visits in March and April, they were rare during May. Furthermore, most pitchers that received copious amounts of feces in March and April received none in May. The reasons for this are unknown and may involve changes in the foraging behaviour of T. montana or perhaps a reduction in the quantity and/or quality of the lid gland secretions. Through video recordings, we found that T. montana still visited pitchers of N. rajah during May (Chin et al.14), but very few fecal pellets were deposited inside them. Tree shrews mark valuable resources using feces,16 so it is feasible that during periods of decreased nectar production, T. montana alters its foraging behavior to utilize alternative food resources, resulting in decreased rates of defecation into N. rajah pitchers.N. lowii, N. rajah and N. macrophylla are virtually confined to montane habitats above 1,800 m altitude, but the geographical range of T. montana extends well beyond that of the “toilet pitchers” and includes a number of sites that are substantially lower than 1,800 m.17 Given this, why are the toilet pitchers not found at lower altitudes? Large, fleshy fruits with small seeds (such as figs) comprise a major component of the diet of T. montana,18 but plants that produce these are relatively scarce in alpine and upper montane equatorial habitats.19 This could limit the distribution of toilet pitchers in two ways. First, the lack of fleshy fruits at high altitudes might make toilet pitchers a valuable resource for T. montana in upper montane habitats. Furthermore, the density of arthropods at high altitudes is considerably less than in the lowlands.20 This exerts selective pressure on Nepenthes to adopt non-carnivorous nutrient acquisition strategies.13 Accordingly, the production of very large, specialized pitchers that receive a steady input of feces may provide a net benefit for the plants, but only at high altitudes. Second, at lower altitudes, fleshy fruits (and arthropods) are more abundant and at these sites the benefits of producing toilet pitchers may be reduced or even negated, hence their absence from smaller mountains.Through their unique pitcher characteristics and trap geometries, a number of Nepenthes species derive supplementary nutrition from a wide variety of arthropod groups, leaf litter and animal feces.6,10,13,14,21,22 It is arguable that no other plant family has such a complex and diverse array of interactions with animals. Recent discoveries add to a growing body of evidence to suggest that Nepenthes demonstrate adaptive radiation with regard to nutrient sequestration strategies (see Chin et al.14 for a more detailed discussion). The findings of Chin et al.14 provide the strongest support for this hypothesis to date; in addition, they provide the first plausible explanation for the extraordinary size of N. rajah pitchers. This iconic species is the world''s largest carnivorous plant and was first described 150 years ago. The population studied by Chin et al.14 grows at a site on Mount Kinabalu that has been visited by tourists since 2001 and has been regularly examined by scientists and Sabah Parks staff for more than 30 years. Despite this, the association between N. rajah and T. montana remained undetected until we employed remote survey methods to record pitcher visitors. To date, this technique has been used on just five species of Nepenthes4,5,13,14 and in each case, remarkable insights into the interactions between animals and Nepenthes have been gained. The potential for further discoveries using this method is therefore high and through new and innovative experimental methodologies now being employed, we anticipate many more exciting discoveries in the near future.  相似文献   

13.
The pitcher plant Nepenthes ampullaria has an unusual growth pattern, which differs markedly from other species in the carnivorous genus Nepenthes. Its pitchers have a reflexed lid and sit above the soil surface in a tighly packed 'carpet'. They contain a significant amount of plant-derived materials, suggesting that this species is partially herbivorous. We tested the hypothesis that the plant benefits from leaf litter utilization by increased photosynthetic efficiency sensu stricto cost/benefit model. Stable nitrogen isotope abundance indicated that N. ampullaria derived around 41.7 ± 5.5% of lamina and 54.8 ± 7.0% of pitcher nitrogen from leaf litter. The concentrations of nitrogen and assimilation pigments, and the rate of net photosynthesis (A(N)), increased in the lamina as a result of feeding, but did not increase in the trap. However, maximal (F(v) /F(m)) and effective photochemical quantum yield of photosystem II (Φ(PSII)) were unaffected. Our data indicate that N. ampullaria benefits from leaf litter utilization and our study provides the first experimental evidence that the unique nitrogen sequestration strategy of N. ampullaria provides benefits in term of photosynthesis and growth.  相似文献   

14.
猪笼草是一类食虫植物,通过捕虫囊内消化液分解猎物,为自身生长提供营养。猪笼草消化液中含天冬氨酸蛋白酶、几丁质酶等水解酶类,还有萘醌、自由基及一些无机离子。猪笼草消化液具有抗真菌,治疗创伤、头痛等药用功能,并有抗肿瘤、降血压、抗疟疾等潜在药用开发价值。对猪笼草消化液的成分及活性进行归纳,为其药用开发提供思路。  相似文献   

15.
The pitchers of the tropical carnivorous plant Nepenthes alata are highly specialized organs for the attraction and capture of insects and absorption of nutrients from them. This study examined the structure and development of these pitchers, with particular focus on the nectaries and digestive glands. Immature pitchers developed at the tips of tendrils and were tightly sealed by a lid structure that opened during the end of pitcher elongation. Opened pitchers exposed a ridged peristome containing large nectaries. Like other members of the genus, a thick coating of epicuticular waxy scales covered the upper one-third of the pitcher. Scattered within this zone were cells resembling a stomatal complex with a protruding ridge. Cross sections showed that this ridge was formed by asymmetric divisions of the epidermal cells and lacked an underlying pore. The basal region of the trap had large multicellular glands that developed from single epidermal cells. These glands were closely associated with underlying vascular traces and provided a mechanism for supplying fluid to closed immature pitchers.  相似文献   

16.
An CI  Takekawa S  Okazawa A  Fukusaki E  Kobayashi A 《Planta》2002,215(3):472-477
Carnivorous plants acquire substantial amounts of nitrogen from insects. The tropical carnivorous plant Nepenthes produces trapping organs called pitchers at the tips of tendrils elongated from leaf ends. Acidic fluid is secreted at the bottoms of the pitchers. The pitcher fluid includes several hydrolytic enzymes, and some, such as aspartic proteinase, are thought to be involved in nitrogen acquisition from insect proteins. To understand the nitrogen-acquisition process, it is essential to identify the protein-degradation products in the pitcher fluid. To gain insight into protein degradation in pitcher fluid, we used the oxidized B-chain of bovine insulin as a model substrate, and its degradation by the pitcher fluid of N. alata was investigated using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). LC-MS analysis of the degradation products revealed that the oxidized B-chain of bovine insulin was initially cleaved at aromatic amino acids such as phenylalanine and tyrosine. These cleavage sites are similar to those of aspartic proteinases from other plants and animals. The presence of a series of peptide fragments as degradation products suggests that exopeptidase(s) is also present in the pitcher fluid. Amino acid analysis and peptide fragment analysis of the degradation products demonstrated that three amino acids plus small peptides were released from the oxidized B-chain of bovine insulin, suggesting that insect proteins are readily degraded to small peptides and amino acids in the pitcher fluid of N. alata.  相似文献   

17.
Tropical pitcher plants (Nepenthes) catch animals in their specialized cup-shaped leaves, digest the prey by secreting enzymes, and actively take up the resulting compounds. The benefit of this behaviour is the ability to grow and compete in nutrient-poor habitats. Our present in vitro study shows that not only the nitrogen of alanine fed to the carnivorous organs is used by the plant but that in addition intact C2-units derived from C-2 and C-3 of stable isotope labelled L-alanine serve as building blocks, here exemplarily for the synthesis of the secondary metabolite plumbagin, a potent allelochemical. This result adds a new facet to the benefit of carnivory for plants. The availability of plumbagin by a de novo synthesis probably enhances the plants' fitness in their defence against phytophagous and pathogenic organisms. A missing specific uptake or CoA activation mechanism might be the reason that acetate fed to the pitchers was not incorporated into the naphthoquinone plumbagin. The dihydronaphthoquinone glucosides rossoliside and plumbaside A, here isolated for the first time from Nepenthes, by contrast, showed no incorporation after feeding of any of the two precursors, suggesting these compounds to be storage forms with probably very low turnover rates.  相似文献   

18.
Insect capture and digestion contribute substantially to the nitrogen budget of carnivorous plants. In Nepenthes, insect-derived nitrogenous compounds are imported from the pitcher fluid and transported throughout the plant via the vascular tissue to support growth. Import and distribution of nutrients may require transmembrane nitrogen transporters. Representatives of three classes of genes encoding transporters for the nitrogenous compounds ammonium, amino acids and peptides were identified in Nepenthes pitchers. The expression at the cellular level of an ammonium transporter gene, three amino acid transporter genes, and one peptide transporter gene were investigated in the insect trapping organs of Nepenthes. Expression of the ammonium transporter gene NaAMT1 was detected in the head cells of digestive glands in the lower part of the pitcher where NaAMT1 may function in ammonium uptake from the pitcher fluid. One amino acid transporter gene, NaAAP1, was expressed in bundle sheath cells surrounding the vascular tissue. To understand the locations where transmembrane transport could be required within the pitcher, symplasmic and apoplasmic continuity was probed using fluorescent dyes. Symplasmic connections were not found between cortical cells and vascular bundles. Therefore, the amino acid transporter encoded by NaAAP1 may be involved in transport of amino acids into the vascular tissue. In contrast, expression of the peptide transporter gene NaNTR1 was detected in phloem cells of the vascular tissue within pitchers. NaNTR1 may function in the export of nitrogen from the pitcher by loading peptides into the phloem.  相似文献   

19.
Carnivorous plants avoid below-ground competition for nitrogen by utilizing an alternative nitrogen resource—invertebrate prey, but it remains unclear if sympatric carnivorous plants compete for prey resources. The aim of this study was to investigate if exploitative prey-resource competition occurs between the two sympatric pitcher plant species, Nepenthes rafflesiana and N. gracilis in Singapore. We first investigated if prey-resource partitioning occurs between these two species, and then investigated niche shift in N. gracilis by examining its pitcher contents along an in situ gradient of N. rafflesiana interspecific competition. Our results showed clear evidence of resource partitioning between the two species, but contrary to the expectation of competition, proximity to N. rafflesiana pitchers correlated with higher total prey numbers in N. gracilis pitchers. Our multivariate model of prey assemblages further suggested that N. rafflesiana facilitates N. gracilis prey capture, especially in several ant taxa that are trapped by both species. Concurrently, we found strong evidence for intraspecific competition between N. gracilis pitchers, suggesting that prey resources are exhaustible by pitcher-predation. Our results show that resource partitioning can be associated with facilitative interactions, instead of competition as is usually assumed. Facilitation is more typically expected between phylogenetically distant species, but divergences in resource acquisition strategies can permit facilitation between congeners.  相似文献   

20.
The pitcher-shaped leaves of Nepenthes carnivorous plants have been considered as pitfall traps that essentially rely on slippery surfaces to capture insects. But a recent study of Nepenthes rafflesiana has shown that the viscoelasticity of the digestive fluid inside the pitchers plays a key role. Here, we investigated whether Nepenthes species exhibit diverse trapping strategies. We measured the amount of slippery wax on the pitcher walls of 23 taxa and the viscoelasticity of their digestive liquid and compared their retention efficiency on ants and flies. The amount of wax was shown to vary greatly between species. Most mountain species exhibited viscoelastic digestive fluids while water-like fluids were predominant in lowland species. Both characteristics contributed to insect trapping but wax was more efficient at trapping ants while viscoelasticity was key in trapping insects and was even more efficient than wax on flies. Trap waxiness and fluid viscoelasticity were inversely related, suggesting the possibility of an investment trade-off for the plants. Therefore Nepenthes pitcher plants do not solely employ slippery devices to trap insects but often employ a viscoelastic strategy. The entomofauna specific to the plant's habitat may exert selective pressures, favouring one trapping strategy at the expense of the other.  相似文献   

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