The 52 orchid species in the American Naturalist study belong to a group called the Coryciinae that all secrete oil inside their flowers. Female Rediviva bees collect the oil to feed to their larvae. Scientists have long suspected that insect diversity can increase plant diversity as plants adapt to new pollinators. “What is remarkable in these orchids is that diversity is generated not only through switches between pollinators, but also by switches between different body parts of the same pollinator,” says Dr Anton Pauw from the Department of Botany and Zoology at Stellenbosch University in South Africa.
“For example, two closely related orchids may place pollen on different segments of the front leg of the same bee.” A specific example is the orchids Pterygodium pentherianum and Pterygodium schelpei. When they live side by side, Pterygodium pentherianum puts its pollen on the bee's front legs, whereas Pterygodium schelpei puts it on the bee's abdomen. |