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Cone humidity is a strong attractant in an obligate cycad pollination system

Journal Article
đź“–
Salzman S, Dahake A, Kandalaft W, Valencia-Montoya WA Calonje M, Specht CD, Raguso RA. 2023. Cone humidity is a strong attractant in an obligate cycad pollination system. Current Biology 33 (9): 1654-1664. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.03.021.

Abstract

Highlights

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Pollinators show a strong physiological humidity response and behavioral preference
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Pollinators can discern fine differences in relative humidity
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Plant reproductive morphology concentrates humidity in a landing-strip-type fashion
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Pollinator antennae show striking morphology associated with humidity sensing

Summary

Studies of pollination biology often focus on visual and olfactory aspects of attraction, with few studies addressing behavioral responses and morphological adaptation to primary metabolic attributes. As part of an in-depth study of obligate nursery pollination of cycads, we find that Rhopalotria furfuracea weevils show a strong physiological response and behavioral orientation to the cone humidity of the host plant Zamia furfuracea in an equally sensitive manner to their responses to Z. furfuracea-produced cone volatiles. Our results demonstrate that weevils can perceive fine-scale differences in relative humidity (RH) and that individuals exhibit a strong behavioral preference for higher RH in binary choice assays. Host plant Z. furfuracea produces a localized cloud of higher than ambient humidity around both pollen and ovulate cones, and R. furfuracea weevils preferentially land at the zone of maximum humidity on ovulate cones, i.e., the cracks between rows of megasporophylls that provide access to the ovules. Moreover, R. furfuracea weevils exhibit striking antennal morphological traits associated with RH perception, suggesting the importance of humidity sensing in the evolution of this insect lineage. Results from this study suggest that humidity functions in a signal-like fashion in this highly specialized pollination system and help to characterize a key pollination-mediating trait in an ancient plant lineage.

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Cited By 23

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Citations:

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Humidity Cue Overcomes Pollinator Avoidance Behavior and May Contribute to Host-Plant Shifts
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Squash flowers as microhabitats: the effects of floral temperature and humidity on pollen viability and visitor behavior
• 2025 • DOI • OpenAlex
Sources: OpenAlex & OpenCitations • Counts may differ from Crossref/Google Scholar