Charles Darwin had the right idea about a type of self-pollination called cleistogamy in flowers, researchers find.
Some plant species actually produce two types of flowers: “normal” ones that look great, and “runts” that are small, never open, and—rather than attract pollinating insects—instead pollinate themselves.
In a study in Current Biology, Daniel Schoen of McGill University and Simon Joly of the Université de Montréal show that cleistogamy, as this type of self-pollination is known, is strongly associated with bilaterally symmetric flowers, such as orchids, that have a single plane of symmetry instead of multiple ones.
Darwin hypothesized as much some 150 years ago, but now Joly and Schoen have found scientific support for the hypothesis.
“Flowers generally harbor both male and female reproductive organs, which for a sedentary organism is an effective evolutionary strategy to ensure reproduction,” explains Joly, a researcher at the Montreal Botanical Garden, a Montréal Space for Life institution. “By offering a reward such as nectar or pollen—or the promise of such a reward—flowers have allowed plants to entice animal pollinators into mediating the movement of pollen from one plant to another of the same species, effectively acting as intermediaries in the mating process.”
“The problem with this strategy,” Joly continues, “is that in the absence of pollinators, the plant may fail to reproduce or have less success doing so.”
Some plants have found ways to avoid this problem. “Some of their flowers self-pollinate, and when pollinators are scarce, the production of closed flowers is certainly the most distinctive and efficient solution to ensure self-pollination. It’s not a common strategy, but cleistogamy is nevertheless relatively widespread among the flowering plants.”
Indeed, it is present in more than 500 species from 40 families of flowering plants, such as jewelweeds and violets. Cleistogamy largely goes unnoticed, however, because the cleistogamous flowers are so tiny.
“Darwin was well aware of the advantages of cleistogamy as a reproductive ‘strategy,’ and he hypothesized that it is more likely to occur in species with bilaterally symmetric flowers than in species with radially-symmetric flowers, which have several planes of symmetry, such as apple blossoms. And this is because the former are normally pollinated by fewer species of insect pollinators compared to radially symmetric flowers,” explains Schoen, professor of botany in McGill’s biology department.
“Because of their reliance on a narrower range of pollinator species, plants that possess bilaterally-symmetric flowers may more likely fail to get pollinated compared with plants with radially-symmetric flowers.”
Until now, however, Darwin’s hypothesis on the association between cleistogamy and “zygomorphy”, as the phenomenon of bilateral symmetry in known in botany, had never been properly tested.
To do so, the team analyzed more than 2,500 species of flowering plants—the largest dataset ever gathered for flowers exhibiting these unusual characteristics. “Evolutionary models suggest that cleistogamy evolves almost four times more frequently in zygomorphic species,” Joly says, “and we found the same results whichever way we analyzed the data.”
The coauthors also find that, compared with radially-symmetric species, bilaterally-symmetric species on average produce half the number of seeds and fruits in the absence of pollinators, suggesting that cleistogamy has potentially more impact for them in ensuring reproduction.
“These results suggest that the production of both open and closed flowers is favored in environments with fluctuating conditions, such as when pollinator abundance varies,” adds Schoen.
The new study highlights the challenge that flowers face: to ensure their reproduction while minimizing inbreeding. Cleistogamy represents one solution to this dilemma by producing two types of flowers: normal ones that “outcross” (pollinate from outside) and cleistogamous ones that reproduce when conditions for pollination are poor.
“We’ve confirmed the hypothesis that Darwin originally made from his observations of a few dozen species,” explains Joly. “Interestingly, some scientists who have developed new plant varieties have suggested that if genetically-modified plants could be bred to produce only cleistogamous flowers, this could aid in reducing the spread of engineered genomes through their pollen—a practical application that could have great benefit for the environment.”
Source: McGill University