This lifting motion repeatedly tosses the wasp onto the column. Following all this abuse, the wasp flies away with pollinia attached to it and/or has deposited pollinia on the stigma. |
An equally interesting relationship occurs
between many Australian terrestrials and thynnid wasps. Fragrances secreted
by the osmophores of Drakaea, Spiculaea, Caladenia and other genera attract
male wasps in a very species specific way. The deceit is reinforced by the
configuration of calluses on the labellum. The males then try to mate with
the labellum or else lift it as they would a female wasp. In the normal sequence
of events, the wasp comes into contact with the column of the flower, and
is actually hammered onto it in the case of Drakaea. |
| Brightly colored flowers pollinated by butterflies
generally have a landing platform and offer nectar. Good examples of butterfly
pollinated orchids are some species of Epidendrum. On the other hand, moth-pollinated
flowers such as those of Brassavola and Angraecum are white, cream or greenish,
fragrant at night, and offer nectar in tubular structures such as a spur or
a mentum, a "chin" at the base of the flower formed by the column-foot and
bases of the lateral sepals. Bird-pollinated orchids are rarely fragrant and are brightly colored in shades of red or yellow, and often tubular and nectariferous, The best-known examples in the Neotropics are Comparettia and some epidendrums, pollinated by hummingbirds, and the Palaeotropical Dendrobium lawesii and Dendrobium mohlianum, pollinated by sunbirds, honeyeaters, etc. Pollinia are transferred to pollinators in many different ways. Some pollinia have extensions of anther-derived tissue called caudicles that stick to the pollinators but break once the pollinia are on the stigmatic surface of a flower. Caudicles are found in such genera as Eria, Laelia, Coelogyne and Bletia. An evolutionary advance in orchids was the development of the rostellum, part of the median stigma lobe, which has at least two very important functions. First, it separates the anther from the fertile part of the stigma and prevents self-pollination in most species. Second, part of it, the viscidium, is a sticky pad frequently connected by a stalk to the pollinia. This pollination unit is called a pollinarium (pl. pollinaria). When the viscidium is touched, it quickly adheres so that as the pollinator backs out of the flower the entire pollinarium is removed with it. In many species the stalk dries differentially over time and changes its orientation, promoting out crossing (Dressier. 1981 ). |
The bee pollinator asleep in the Diuris behrii flower |