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Summary of the final report on
the Australian Flora Foundation funded project:
Seed biology of Australian euphorbs
Dr Duncan Mackay and Dr Molly A. Whalen
School of Biological Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide
29 March 1998 Grant details
Final report
Summary
Within the Euphorbiaceae, many species have seeds that bear an appendage
called a caruncle, although carunculate seeds have a sporadic taxonomic
distribution, with some euphorb genera containing both carunculate and
ecarunculate species (Webster 1994). The euphorb caruncle is often assumed
to function as an elaiosome, that is, as an appendage that facilitates
seed dispersal by ants, or myrmecochory. This assumption has received
very little quantitative or experimental verification.
Our work on the euphorb Adriana concentrated on determining whether
or not carunculate seeds are dispersed by ants and whether or not the
caruncle is an attractant to seed-dispersing ants. Together, the field
and laboratory choice trials indicated that the caruncle is attractive
to ants and that carunculate seeds are particularly attractive to omnivorous
ants of the genera Rhytidoponera and Iridomyrmex.
Since elaiosomes have been hypothesised to have evolved so as to resemble
arthropods in their fatty acid composition, we compared the fatty acid
compositions of blowflies and Adriana seed and caruncles. Blowflies
resembled Adriana caruncles in having relatively low concentrations
(10%) of linoleic acid and intermediate concentrations (18%) of palmitic
acid, in contrast to Adriana seeds which have relatively high
concentrations (62%) of linoleic acid and relatively low concentrations
(5%) of palmitic acid.
The caruncle:seed mass ratio has been shown to be an important cue eliciting
diaspore removal in other studies. Hence they were analysed in populations
of Adriana quadripartite. Analysis of diaspore and caruncle weights
revealed that while there is significant variation in seed weight, the
relationship between seed weight and caruncle weight does not vary among
populations, and hence the caruncle:seed mass ratio does not vary significantly
among the sampled populations.
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