• Web Site Pages

  • Tags

  • Article Categories

  • Article Archives

  • Random Quote

    In questions of science, the authority of a thousand is not worth the humble reasoning of a single individual. — Galileo Galilei

  • Administration

  • Current Moon Phase


    Waxing Crescent Moon
    Waxing Crescent Moon

Fig trees kill when wasps don’t pollinate them

wasp on fig

A female fig wasp (Tetrapus americanus) is about to enter a flowering fig (Ficus maxima).

Figs and fig wasps have evolved to help each other out: Fig wasps lay their eggs inside the fruit where the wasp larvae can safely develop, and in return, the wasps pollinate the figs.

But what happens when a wasp lays its eggs but fails to pollinate the fig?

The trees get even by dropping those figs to the ground, killing the baby wasps inside, reports a Cornell and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (published online Jan. 13).

The findings suggest that when one species in a mutually beneficial relationship fails to hold up its end of the bargain, sanctions may be a necessary part of maintaining the relationship.

“We want to know what forces maintain this 80 million-year-old mutualism between figs and their wasp pollinators,” said lead author Charlotte Jandér, a Cornell graduate student in neurobiology and behavior, who conducted the study as a Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute predoctoral fellow. Edward Allen Herre, a staff scientist at the Smithsonian institute in Panama, co-authored the paper.

wasp on fig

Once inside, the fig wasp will pollinate and lay her eggs in the flowers that line the inside of the fig.

“What prevents the wasps from cheating and reaping the benefits of the relationship without paying the costs?” Jandér added.

More than 700 species each of fig trees and wasps have co-evolved in the tropics worldwide, with each fig tree species having its own species of pollinating wasp. Jandér worked on six fig tree-fig wasp pairs for the study. Some wasp species passively carry pollen that sticks to their bodies, while others actively collect pollen in special pouches.

The researchers found that in passively pollinated pairings, the tree almost never aborted its fruit, and the wasp always carried pollen. However, the researchers found that in actively pollinated pairings, where the wasp needs to expend energy to collect pollen, the tree dumped the fruit and killed the offspring when the wasps did not carry pollen.

The researchers also found that among the actively pollinated fig species, pollen-free wasps were much more common when the trees had weak sanctions.

“Sanctions seem to be a necessary force in keeping this and other mutually beneficial relationships on track when being part of a mutualism is costly,” said Jandér. “In our study, we saw less cheating when sanctions were stronger. Similar results have been found among human societies and social insects. It is very appealing to think that the same general principles could help maintain cooperation both within and among species.”

The study was supported by the Cornell Graduate School and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.

 

via Cornell Chronicle: Figs kill when wasps don’t pollinate.


Related Articles

Write a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • Join us in the Paltalk Room

    - Windows Paltalk Client
    - Mac / Web Paltalk Express
    - iPhone, Android, Blackberry

    We're in the "Paltalk /
    Religion & Spirituality / Christianity / Debate Faith with AAL" room.


  • Atheist At Large Store

  • Deity of the Day

    DEITY OF THE DAY
    Daily Gods powered by
    www.godchecker.com
  • Recent Articles

  • NASA Image of the Day

    SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches

     
    The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket soared into space from Space Launch Complex-40 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, carrying the Dragon capsule to orbit at 3:44 a.m. EDT on Tuesday, May 22, 2012. The launch is the company's second demonstration test flight for NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services, or COTS, Program. During the flight, there will be a series of check-out procedures to test and prove Dragon's systems, including rendezvous and berthing with the International Space Station. If the capsule performs as planned, the cargo and experiments it is carrying will be transferred to the station. Image Credit: NASA/Alan Ault
    Read More
  • Spam

    159
    Spam comments blocked