A novel nursery pollination mutualism between a water primrose and its fruit-parasitizing weevil.
Wu SM, Chen G.
Pollinators
Weevils — those small, snout-nosed beetles most gardeners curse — turn out to be secret pollination partners for some aquatic plants, which means the next time you see one near your pond plants, it may be doing more good than harm.
Most people think of pollination as a bee-and-flower deal, but some plants have much stranger arrangements. This water primrose has struck a bargain with a tiny weevil: the weevil visits the flowers and moves pollen between them, but it also sneaks its eggs into the developing fruit so its babies have food to eat. The plant loses a little fruit, but gains a reliable pollinator — a surprisingly fair trade that scientists had never documented in this plant before.
Key Findings
A fruit-parasitizing weevil acts as a functional pollinator of water primrose, establishing a novel nursery pollination mutualism — a rare interaction type previously known mainly from figs, yuccas, and a handful of other plants.
The relationship is mutualistic despite the weevil's larvae consuming fruit tissue, suggesting the pollination benefit to the plant outweighs the reproductive cost of fruit parasitism.
This discovery expands the known diversity of nursery pollination systems and identifies water primrose (Ludwigia spp.) as a new host genus in this ecological guild.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists have discovered a previously unknown 'nursery pollination' relationship between water primrose and a fruit-feeding weevil: the weevil pollinates the flowers while also laying eggs inside the fruit, where its larvae develop — a rare and delicate tradeoff that benefits both species.
Species Mentioned
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Ludwigia is a genus of about 82 species of aquatic plants with a cosmopolitan but mainly tropical distribution.