Plant Biol (Stuttg) 2006; 8(4): 529-534
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-924045
Short Research Paper

Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart KG · New York

Caladium bicolor (Araceae) and Cyclocephala celata (Coleoptera, Dynastinae): A Well-Established Pollination System in the Northern Atlantic Rainforest of Pernambuco, Brazil

A. C. D. Maia1 , C. Schlindwein2
  • 1Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Cidade Universitária, Av. Prof. Morais Rego, 1235, Recife, BR 50670-420, Brazil
  • 2Departamento de Botanica, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, Cidade Universitária, Av. Prof. Morais Rego, s/n, Recife, BR 50670-901, Brazil
Further Information

Publication History

Received: January 5, 2006

Accepted: February 24, 2006

Publication Date:
11 May 2006 (online)

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Abstract

Flowering, pollination ecology, and floral thermogenesis of Caladium bicolor were studied in the Atlantic Rainforest of Pernambuco, NE Brazil. Inflorescences of this species are adapted to the characteristic pollination syndrome performed by Cyclocephalini beetles. They bear nutritious rewards inside well-developed floral chambers and exhibit a thermogenic cycle which is synchronized to the activity period of visiting beetles. Heating intervals of the spadix were observed during consecutive evenings corresponding to the beginning of the female and male phases of anthesis. Highest temperatures were recorded during the longer-lasting female phase. An intense sweet odour was volatized on both evenings. Beetles of a single species, Cyclocephala celata, were attracted to odoriferous inflorescences of C. bicolor and are reported for the first time as Araceae visitors. All the inflorescences visited by C. celata developed into infructescences, whereas unvisited inflorescences showed no fruit development. Findings of previous studies in the Amazon basin of Surinam indicated that Cyclocephala rustica is a likely pollinator of C. bicolor. This leads to the assumption that locally abundant Cyclocephalini species are involved in the pollination of this species.

References

A. C. D. Maia

Departamento de Zoologia
Universidade Federal de Pernambuco
Cidade Universitária

Av. Prof. Morais Rego, 1235

Recife, BR 50670-420

Brazil

Email: artur_campos_maia@yahoo.com.br

Editor: M. Ayasse