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Sunday, 6 April 2014

Mimicry in Plants



In the last weeks I talked about mimicry emphasizing animals. Now, we are going to see some examples of mimicry in the Plant Kingdom. Yes! Plants can present mimicry. They use to avoid predators, but it is also used to attract and deceive insects. 

There are three types of mimicry in plants. They are: Batesian, Mullerian and Aggressive mimicry. Batesian and Mullerian types we already know. The new one, aggressive, occurs when an organism mimics a signal appearance in order to deceive or attract another organism. There are some examples of plant species that have these adaptations.

Bateasian Mimicry: 

One of the most famous examples of Batesian Mimicry of toxic or poisonous species in plants is that of the Urticaceae (stinging plants). They are very common and they have leaves that carry a powerful sting if touched. Some species such as from India can kill little kids in some cases. The leaf shape is very recognizable. As a result, there are a lot of plants that their leaves look similar those of nettles. For example, some white deadnettle, mint and other members of the family Lamiaceae. 

Urticaceae (stinging plants)
 
 Mint
  

White deadnettle


Other known Batesian mimicry is grass species as crop weeds. Some weeds are indistinguishable from real crops. Weeds can easily contaminate seed stores. One famous example is darnel ryegrass (Lolium temulentum), can be mimetic of wheat (Triticum aestivum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare). There is considerable evolutionary pressure on wild plants to attempt to inhabit agricultural fields.


 Lolium temulentum

Triticum aestivum

In my opinion, the most interesting is the fact that crops are relatively “recent method” to produce food. So, how these weeds can evolve aspects so similar? Some scientists believe that as was having extermination of weeds so these weeds evolved characteristics that could help them survive. As they have a quickly reproduction so is easier to see that evolution.   


References 

Book:
Scott, P. 2008, Physiology and Behaviour of plants, 1st edn, Wiley: USA

Pictures viewed 05 April 2014: 




2 comments:

  1. Very cool! It is really interesting that some grasses have evolved to look like crop plants. Will you be going into a little more detail on Müllerian and Aggressive mimicry in plants at a later stage? Can you explain why various species of stinging plants, even from completely different areas, tend to converge on the same type of shape?

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    1. Well, there is a lot of discussions about that. I read some articles that are trying to respond it. They have some hipothesys that could be big mutations or convergent traits. However, they do not confirmed yet. I gonna post some articles in the next weeks that talk about it.

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