Image: Tindo2 |
Have you heard of mycorrhiza? It's the name of the delicate relationship established between some fungi and many plants.
Image: Tindo2 Thismia rodwayi |
An alliance is struck. The plant provides the fungus with sugars it gets from photosynthesis and in return the fungus becomes an elite army of subterranean mineral producers, scouring the earth for food and drawing nutrients from material the plant is incapable of dealing with.
Image: rmounce |
Image: rmounce |
Fungi spend most of their time as underground threads and occasionally grow a mushroom to spread their spores. Thismia spend most of their time as thieving roots and occasionally grow a tiny flower for pollination. They have no chlorophyll and no leaves because they simply don't need them.
Video: Vincent Merckx
It's not easy to uncover information about these plants, partly no doubt because it's not easy to uncover the plants themselves. There seems to be something of a mystery as to how pollination takes place, with suggestions that it might be achieved by tiny fungus gnats or animals that feed on roots and fungi.
Either way, the 50 or so species in the genus typically have a very constrained distribution, which means their pollen and seeds seldom go far. They all live in the southern hemisphere, in South and Central America and from Japan through to New Zealand.
Image: rmounce |
It's so sad to lose it. This strange outlier who apparently survived so far from all its relatives. Are there others in other parts of North America? Was it a relic from ancient times that clung to life in the few remaining micro-habitats that could sustain it? Was it a seed from a completely different part of the world that somehow found itself in Chicago and managed to flower? It looks like we will never know.
I bet the fairies are livid...
freaky little things!
ReplyDeleteThe red ones look like a trio of conjoined, eyeless, skinned frogs. Eternally screaming, of course.
ReplyDeletethat blue one looks really alien
ReplyDeleteIf I ever had a plant at work, I'd like to have a bunch of parasitic plants that are busy beating each other up than just a ficus or something
ReplyDeleteOh yeah! Did you make sure to get that one issue of National Geographic that I told you about?
ReplyDeleteWhy does the prettiest plant have to have such a mean spirit? :(
ReplyDeleteIt's Evidorable!
ReplyDelete@TexWisGirl: They sure are!
ReplyDelete@Crunchy: Holy moley! These fairies are MONSTERS!
@Porakiya Draekojin: Alien, yeah. Or maybe a blue ice cream?
Uh oh... I didn't get that Nat Geo. Is it still around? Maybe I can pop down to a big bookshop and find it. I hope!
@Lear's Fool: Yeah, a nice competitive plant with its fists up rather than some layabout sitting there being pretty!
@Esther: Maybe they had to be pretty to get away with it? Maybe the fungal police are rather unprofessional that way>
@Joseph: Yes, it's still around
ReplyDelete@Joseph: here's the online variant, though without all the pictures: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2014/11/mindsuckers/zimmer-text
ReplyDeleteWow... nice. I'll still look for a copy tomorrow or Monday. "All the pictures" sounds like something it's best not to do without!
ReplyDeleteYes. and, apparently, I didn't notice the gallery in the upper right corner....or the comic-style stories underneath. Apparently there are pictures in the gallery that aren't in the magazine
ReplyDeleteI'll give it a good look tomorrow. I noticed there was some kind of comic there... weird!
ReplyDeleteYup! there's three of them, with a video above them and the picture gallery above that
ReplyDelete