gelechiidae moths are capable of chemically dissolving the pollen of their host plants
Male
0301 basic medicine
Life Cycle Stages
570
Time Factors
Behavior, Animal
Ecology
Science
Q
R
Moths
Carotenoids
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry
Evolution, Molecular
Phyllanthus
03 medical and health sciences
Biopolymers
Medicine
Animals
Pollen
Female
Phylogeny
Research Article
DOI:
10.5282/ubm/epub.14660
Publication Date:
2011-04-28
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Background: Many insects feed on pollen surface lipids and contents accessible through the germination pores. Pollen walls, however, are not broken down because they consist of sporopollenin and are highly resistant to physical and enzymatic damage. Here we report that certain Microlepidoptera chemically dissolve pollen grains with exudates from their mouthparts. Methodology/Principal Findings: Field observations and experiments in tropical China revealed that two species of Deltophora (Gelechioidea) are the exclusive pollinators of two species of Phyllanthus (Phyllanthaceae) on which their larvae develop and from which the adults take pollen and nectar. DNA sequences placed the moths and plants phylogenetically and confirmed that larvae were those of the pollinating moths; molecular clock dating suggests that the moth clade is younger than the plant clade. Captive moths with pollen on their mouthparts after 2-3 days of starvation no longer carried intact grains, and SEM photographs showed exine fragments on their proboscises. GC-MS revealed cis-b-ocimene as the dominant volatile in leaves and flowers, but GC-MS analyses of proboscis extracts failed to reveal an obvious sporopollenindissolving compound. A candidate is ethanolamine, which occurs in insect hemolymphs and is used to dissolve sporopollenin by palynologists. Conclusions/Significance: This is the first report of any insect and indeed any animal chemically dissolving pollen.
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