The high diversity in orchids may have to do with the orchids' relationship to pollinators. Pollinators play a major role in the generation of novel floral forms and diversity in orchids.
The c. 8000 orchid species that do not offer floral rewards achieve pollination by exploiting food-, mate-, or brood site-seeking behaviour of animals. This is accomplished by visual and olfactory signals that imitate either:
- food plants
- potential mates, or
- brood sites
in a way that varies from generalized approximation to precise mimicry.
Botanists recognized orchids' visual mimicry first, but lately they've uncovered even more interesting scent-based mimicry. Basically, the orchids emit chemicals that smell, to a male insect, just like the sex pheromones emitted by the female of his species.
Pollinator-driven speciation in sexually deceptive orchids
Pollinator-mediated selection has been suggested to play a major role for the origin and maintenance of the species diversity in orchids.
Sexually deceptive orchids - When insect males are stupid enough to mate with flowers
Pollination by deception is very common in orchids; about one third of orchids are deceptive, with sexual deception as an especially intriguing variety. Sexually deceptive orchids mimic the mating signals of female insects and employ male insects as pollinators, inducing them to engage in mating behaviour and pseudocopulation or even copulation.
Chemical mimicry of sex pheromones of pollinator females plays a major role in this process. Because insect mating signals are very specific, pollinator attraction by sexual deception is also very specific, each orchid only attracting one or very few insect species. This specific pollinator attraction therefore acts as a reproductive barrier and prevents gene flow among species.
Among the different sexually deceptive orchids, a well-studied genus is the European
Ophrys (Orchideae) with most of the more than
200 species pollinated by species representing different genera of solitary bees, and a few species pollinated by species of solitary wasps, flies, and beetles. 98% of closely related species of this orchid genus attract different pollinators, most likely by the use of different floral odour bouquets.
Ophrys flowers produce a complex mixture of more than 100 chemical compounds.
For South African species there is however not a great deal of research data available. Two sister species of
Disa were studied to evaluate the effect that minor differences in floral color, shape, and scent have on pollination.
D. atricapilla and
D. bivalvata have overlapping distributional ranges, occupy similar habitats, flower at the same time, and often occur sympatrically. Observations indicate that each species is pollinated almost exclusively by male wasps.
D. atricapilla is pollinated by
Podalonia canescens (Sphecidae), while
D. bivalvata is pollinated mainly by
Hemipepsis hilaris (Pompilidae). Both wasp genera appear to exhibit mate‐seeking behavior when approaching and visiting flowers. This together with the absence of a floral reward suggests that
D. atricapilla and
D. bivalvata are pollinated through sexual deception.
Neither species produces any obvious food reward, but both give off a floral scent. The strong perfumy scent of
D. bivalvata has been characterized as "very fragrant with the odour of ripening apples". The scent of
D. atricapilla is "spicy with a hint of peppermint", but is very weak. This sounds like advertising a new perfume.
That's how you attract your favourite wasp guy
Floral deception is one of the great enigmas of the orchid family. First observed in the eighteenth century by the European naturalist Christian Sprengel, and firmly disbelieved by Darwin, who considered insect pollinators too smart to fall for ‘so gigantic an imposture’, floral deception is now known to occur in at least 30– 40% of the ca 27 000 species in the orchid family. Males are not too smart
. Females don't visit these deceptive flowers
.