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Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 3 Sep 2008 14:06:20 -0400
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From:
Chemical & Engineering News
September 1, 2008
Volume 86, Number 35, p. 11
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/news/86/i35/8635notw4.html

Two-Faced Flowers
Tobacco plants add nicotine to their nectar to improve cross-pollination
Sarah Everts

FLOWERS USE sweet-smelling nectar to entice pollinators. But a new  
study shows that some plants prevent birds and insects from binge  
drinking by lacing the attractive potion in their blooms with a  
little poison.

Effective cross-pollination is contingent on pollinators traveling  
from one flower to the next. If nectar is too sweet, pollinators  
might sate themselves at a single plant, explains Ian T. Baldwin of  
Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, in Jena, Germany, who led  
the study.

"Adding the deterrent is the plant's way of saying, 'Move along, we  
need a job done here,' " comments Robert A. Raguso, a chemical  
ecologist at Cornell University. "The plant needs a way to show  
pollinators the door."

Baldwin's team found that pollinators are first enticed to the  
flowers of Utah's native Nicotiana attenuata tobacco plant with a  
cocktail of volatile attractants, the most potent of which is benzyl  
acetone. But the plant also adds a dose of bitter nicotine to ensure  
only fleeting visits from pollinating hummingbirds, restricting their  
nectar intake to just two microliter sips, Baldwin says.

To show that adding a little poison to the nectar enables cross- 
pollination, the researchers engineered tobacco plants that cannot  
produce nicotine and benzyl acetone. To do so, they introduced  
sequences of interfering RNA, or RNAi, into the tobacco plant genome  
that block the production of essential enzymes in the nicotine and  
benzyl acetone biosynthetic pathways.

Then the researchers did field tests to evaluate the ability of  
normal and engineered plants to cross-pollinate. They found that  
nicotine enabled tobacco to genetically diversify its progeny  
(Science 2008, 321, 1200).

Adding feeding deterrents to nectar is probably used by other plants  
that, like tobacco, can also rely on self-pollination, Raguso notes.  
"The tobacco plant has a contingency plan," because it can also self- 
pollinate, Raguso says. "If you can already ensure a profit" that is,  
seed production through self-pollination, "then you can afford to toy  
with your pollinator," he adds.

"It's an all-encompassing study," comments L. Irene Terry, a chemical  
ecologist at the University of Utah. "They use not only molecular  
genetics and plant bioengineering to obtain the traits they want in  
the plants, but they also follow up this work with chemical analyses,  
field, and pollinator behavior studies."

"People who have worked in pollination have long claimed that nectar  
is sugar water, like a soft drink," Baldwin adds. "Nectar is less  
like a soft drink and more like a hard drink that, like whiskey,  
contains a mix of sweet and harmful ingredients."

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