Common Name: Bee Orchids
A.K.A.: Genus Ophrys
Vital Stats:
- 30-40 recognised species in the genus
- Grows to a height of 15-50 cm (6-20”)
- The name Ophrys comes from a word meaning “eyebrow” in Greek, for the fuzzy edges of the petals
- First mentioned in ancient Roman literature by Pliny the Elder (23-79 A.D.)
Found: Throughout most of Europe and the British Isles
It Does What?!
We tend to think of animals (including humans) as using plants to serve our ends exclusively- we eat them, clothe ourselves with them, build homes with them, and so on. But for all the obvious ways in which the animal kingdom takes advantage of the plants, there are numerous, more subtle, ways that they use us to do their bidding. One of those ways is as pollinators; plants enlist animals to help them reproduce. And while that enlistment often takes a rather mundane form – a bit of pollen brushed onto a bird’s head as it sips nectar, say – sometimes a group of plants will get a bit more creative about it. Such is the case with the bee orchids.
These highly specialised flowers depend on very specific relationships with their pollinators; often only a single species of bee (or wasp, in some cases) will pollinate a given species of orchid. Without those pollinators, the orchids can’t produce seed and would die out. So how do you control a free-roving creature that has other places to be? Why, sex, obviously. (Isn’t that the basis of most advertising?) The bee orchid has evolved a flower that not only looks, but smells like a virgin female of the bee species which pollinates it.
At a distance, the bee detects the pheromones of a receptive female. Once he moves in closer, there she is, sitting on a flower, minding her own business. So he flies in and attempts to do his man-bee thing, only to find that he’s just tried to mate with a plant. Mortified (I imagine), he takes off, but with a small packet of pollen stuck to his head. He’s memorised the scent of this flower now and won’t return to it, but amazingly, the orchids vary their scent just slightly from one flower to the next, even on the same plant, so that the duped bee can never learn to distinguish an orchid from a female. What’s more, because the scent is more different between plants than between flowers on the same plant, he is more likely to proceed to a different plant, decreasing the chances that an orchid will self-fertilise.
Hilariously, researchers have shown that, due to their higher levels of scent variation compared to true female bees (variety being the spice of life, right guys?), male bees actually prefer the artificial pheromones of the orchids over real, live females. In experiments where males were given a choice between mating with an orchid and mating with a bee, they usually chose the flower, even if they had already experienced the real thing.
So there you have it. Plants: master manipulators of us poor, stupid animals.
Says Who?
- Ayasse et al. (2000) Evolution 54(6): 1995-2006
- Ayasse et al. (2003) Proceedings of the Royal Society, London B. 270: 517-522
- Streinzer et al. (2009) Journal of Experimental Biology 212: 1365-1370
- Vereecken & Schiestl (2008) Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 105(21): 7484-7488
- Vereecken et al. (2010) Botanical Review 76: 220-240