When competition
is high, plants have to be creative to explore the diversity of the available potential
pollinators. Not all pollinators are attracted to fruity, sweet scents and
flavours; some flies, for example, feed and lay their eggs on flesh of rotting
animals, thus the smell of fresh carcasses are a temptation for these flies! Flowers,
pliant as they are, can imitate this smell, deceiving the hungry flying
creatures to the illusive corpse feast. I could name a few species of plants
with this kind of strategy, but for now I will focus on one species – the titan
arum, a plant from Sumatra (Indonesia) famous for being ridiculous on both size
and smell – the kind of eccentricity that like to grow in tropical rainforests.
Two titan arums in Sumatra, early 1900's. The inflorescence (right) can reach over 3 metres in height, whereas the leaf (left) can reach up to 6 metres tall! |
The inflorescence is formed by the spadix and a big bract called spathe. Photo: David A. Purvis (New Reekie in bloom at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, June 2015) |
The fertile
parts of the spadix (the flowers) are hidden by the spathe in a space called
floral chamber. Araceae are known for being really good hosts for theirs
pollinators: once the visitors arrive, they sneak into the floral chamber where
they can spend a peaceful night, protected from night dangers and feed their
bellies with some pollen. Meanwhile, they hang around on flowers, obviously
some of that pollen gets attached to their bodies and carried away to the next
pseudanthium the following morning.
Entrance to the floral chamber: flowers are already visible at the base the of spadix Photo: Chlorophil7 |
Araceae flowers
are usually very small and reduced to the essential parts – the sexual organs.
So the tepals are absent or highly reduced; male flowers are reduced to a
single stamen, and female flowers to a single carpel. Now, I haven’t been counting them, but it is
said that in one single A. titanum pseudanthium
the number of female flowers can go up to about 450, condensed in the base of
the inflorescence. Male flowers (as are smaller) can be even more, ranging from
500 to 1000. To avoid self-pollination, female flowers are receptive earlier.
So, when the male flowers start releasing fertile pollen, the stigmas of the
same inflorescences are not receptive anymore, and there is no danger of
self-pollination. It is also very common in Araceae the formation of infertile
male flowers (also called staminodes, as each flower corresponds to one single
stamen), the function of these staminodes is not very clear yet. Titan arum,
however, seems to lack such staminodes.
The base of the spadix bears both male flowers (single-stamen flowers; top of the inflorescence) and female flowers (single-pistil flowers; base of the inflorescence). Left photo: isenbergs2007; Right photo: Brian |
As you can
imagine, producing such a big structure, plus all that smell and heat is a
great expense of energy resources. Thus, the plant only flowers for about 3
days every thousand days (I have learned this one from Sir David Attenborough).
David Attenborough with a wild Amorphophallus titanum in Sumatra filming for BBC's The Private Life of Plants |
Titan arum is
quite a fantastic plant, not only it looks unreal but it is incredible how such
a rare flowering event is enough to succeed on fruit production and perpetuate
the lineage… It seems to be the case where "putting all eggs in one basket" actually works.