TL;DR: The symbiotic technique to germinate seeds of three semi-aquatic rein orchid species from Florida and to cultivate H. repens seedlings has the potential to be adopted by wetland restoration projects seeking to include an orchid and mycorrhizal fungi as biotic agents.
TL;DR: Findings suggest that S. brevilabris maintains a high degree of mycobiont specificity under in vitro symbiotic seed germination conditions, and may be indicative of the rare status of this orchid in Florida.
Abstract: Orchid–mycobiont specificity in the Orchidaceae was considered controversial and not well understood for many years. Differences in mycobiont specificity during germination in vitro vs in situ have lead some to consider orchid–mycobiont specificity as being generally low; however, others have suggested that specificity, especially in vitro, is surprisingly high. Mycobiont specificity may be genus or species specific. An in vitro symbiotic seed germination experiment was designed to examine mycobiont specificity of the endangered Florida terrestrial orchid Spiranthes brevilabris using mycobionts isolated from both the study species and the endemic congener Spiranthes floridana. In a screen of mycobionts, isolates Sflo-305 (99.5%), Sflo-306 (99.5%), and Sflo-308 (89.9%) (originating from S. floridana) supported higher initial (stage 1) seed germination than isolate Sbrev-266 (32.4%) (originating from S. brevilabris) after 3 wk culture. However, only isolate Sbrev-266 supported advanced germination and protocorm development to stage 5 (53.1%) after 12 wk culture. These findings suggest that S. brevilabris maintains a high degree of mycobiont specificity under in vitro symbiotic seed germination conditions. High orchid–mycobiont specificity in S. brevilabris may be indicative of the rare status of this orchid in Florida.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that natural variation in inflorescence architecture significantly affects pollinator behaviour and reproductive success, suggesting that inflorescence Architecture can evolve under pollinator-mediated natural selection in plant populations.
Abstract: • Despite the wide inflorescence diversity among angiosperms, the effects of inflorescence architecture (three-dimensional flower arrangement) on pollinator behaviour and mating success have not been sufficiently studied in natural plant populations. • Here, we investigated how inflorescence architecture affected inter- and intra-plant pollinator movements and consequent mating success in a field population of Spiranthes sinensis var. amoena (S. sinensis). In this species, the flowers are helically arranged around the stem, and the degree of twisting varies greatly among individuals. The large variation in inflorescence architecture in S. sinensis results from variation in a single structural parameter, the helical angle (the angular distance between neighbour-flower directions). • The numbers of visits per inflorescence and successive probes per visit by leaf-cutting bees decreased with helical angle, indicating that individual flowers of tightly twisted inflorescences received less visitations. As expected from pollinator behaviour, pollinia removal and fruit set of individual flowers decreased with helical angle. Meanwhile, geitonogamy decreased in tightly twisted inflorescences. • Our novel findings demonstrate that natural variation in inflorescence architecture significantly affects pollinator behaviour and reproductive success, suggesting that inflorescence architecture can evolve under pollinator-mediated natural selection in plant populations. We also discuss how diverse inflorescence architectures may have been maintained in S. sinensis populations.
TL;DR: Seeds of several terrestrial orchid species native to the United States were germinated on a number of culture media under differing conditions Germination rates and seedling development varied considerably.
Abstract: Seeds of several terrestrial orchid species native to the United States were germinated on a number of culture media under differing conditions Germination rates and seedling development varied considerably
TL;DR: Spiranthes lucida differs from other northeastern taxa of Spiranthes in having an oval viscidium which attaches the pollinia to the clypeus below the antennae, having the nectar available on the under side of the column behind the stigmatic surface, and in lacking protandry.
Abstract: Most northeastern North American Spiranthes are adapted to pollination by long-tongued bees (e.g., Bombus spp. and Megachilidae). The salient features of this adaptation are (i) a long, flat viscidium which attaches the pollinia readily to the flat rigid galea of the insect's proboscis, (ii) the nectar secreted into the base of the floral tube, (iii) the flowers are protandrous and sequential beginning at the base. In contrast, Spiranthes lucida apparently is pollinated largely by halictine bees. It differs from other northeastern taxa of Spiranthes in (i) having an oval viscidium which attaches the pollinia to the clypeus below the antennae, (ii) having the nectar available on the under side of the column behind the stigmatic surface, and (iii) in lacking protandry. In the characteristically Bombus-pollinated taxa, protandry is accomplished by a change in the position of the terminal portion of the column with respect to the lip, apparently due to cell elongation in both the column and the lip. The prese...