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The Secret Sex Life Of Mistletoe

Biology Wednesday, December 15, 2004 by rickyjames

Dr. Ross, who describes herself as a “plant gynecologist,” is the first to figure out some of the cellular characteristics behind the dwarf mistletoe’s impressive ejection system. The results of her NSERC-funded research, co-authored by the University of Manitoba’s Dr. Michael J. Sumner, are published, in part, in the current issue of the Canadian Journal of Botany.

The seeds of the larger Christmas mistletoes (Viscum album and Phoradendron serotinum, parasites respectively of trees in Europe and the eastern U.S.) are dispersed by birds. Indeed, “mistletoe” literally means “turd on a twig.” This refers to the fact that offspring of these parasitic plants start to grow on a new tree host after being eaten and deposited by a bird, complete with their own kick-start fertilizer.

But the dwarf mistletoe takes spreading its seed into its own hands. Through a painstaking microscopic analysis of the seed’s embryonic development, Dr. Ross determined that the growing fruit stores water in a gelatinous substance secreted by helical, or spring-shaped, cells. The water pressure builds until, aided by the spring-like nature of the cells, the fruit explodes.

In Manitoba this mass birthing event occurs during a two-day period around Labour Day. (Really.)

“It’s an event that takes place very quickly,” says Dr. Ross of the ejection of the rice-grain-sized seeds. “I’ve been hit by them.”

As if this discovery weren’t enough to earn the dwarf mistletoe a place of honour by the front door, Dr. Ross says her probing has revealed another floral first that’s “really going to shake things up” in the world of plant reproduction science.

The male portion of the dwarf mistletoe sends out its pollen tube prematurely (or pre-emptively, depending on your interpretation).

“In all previously described flowering plants, the formation of the egg and its accessory cells is thought to trigger a chemical signal that causes the pollen tube to find the egg and fertilize it. But with my dwarf mistletoe, the pollen tube, which contains the plant’s sperm, grows down through the young flower and reaches the area where the egg is going to be long before the egg develops. And that contradicts all of the previous literature,” explains Dr. Ross.

Understanding the details of the dwarf mistletoe’s bedroom life feeds more than just verdant curiosity. Dwarf mistletoes (species of the genus Arceuthobium) are the most destructive pathogens of standing timber in North America. These parasites suck water, minerals and sugars from their tree hosts, stunting their growth and in some cases killing the trees. These include economically important trees, such as the lodgepole pine in British Columbia and the jack pine in central Canada.

“We could potentially target the unusual characteristics of dwarf mistletoe reproduction in disease control, either at the pollination or seed dispersal stages,” says Dr. Ross. “Neighbouring plants, thanks to their more mundane sex life, would likely be safe from whatever we use to kill the pathogen.”

Text for this article comes from a NSERC press release.

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8 Responses to The Secret Sex Life Of Mistletoe

gypsysoul

December 18th, 2004 at 6:25 pm

the Luxurient Flowing Hair Club.  RJ, I believe you should submit a pic for membership consideration.   I mean, some of the guys don’t have waist-length locks– and what they do have is Einstein era.  You, on the other hand– well, can certainly claim luxurient tresses, even if they don’t flow past your shoulders.

Just my objective observation :-).

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rickyjames

December 19th, 2004 at 7:32 am

I’ve been noticing in the mirror lately that when I comb my hair after getting out of the shower, it is a lot thinner than it used to be.  The wet combed strands somehow show my scalp, and I don’t remember seeing that before.  It’s not until my hair gets dry and fluffy that the scalp disappears.  Somehow to me that doesn’t qualify as luxurient.  On the other hand, with my genes I’ll never go bald (altho sometimes I daydream about shaving my head just to see what I’d look like – I’m convinced if I shaved my beard and went with a crew cut I’d look a decade younger), so OK, I accept!

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Anonymous

December 29th, 2004 at 11:34 pm

hi – Cindy here! I am SO-O-O embarassed about the hair thing. My sister did this to me – honest!

Wish i could see some pics of the thinning rj hair, though!

As for the dmt research, I am very, very proud of it. I found many other really cool things that I (ad Mike S.) are publishing ASAP.

I think this website is great!

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rickyjames

December 30th, 2004 at 7:43 pm

dies like a dog!  March on!  OK, so here’s MY hair, attached of course to the rest of me.  It’s going gray due to the stem cell malfunction discussed recently here on SciScoop.  I vote that SciScoop superuser janra be voted into LFHCFS – I think she’s got the locks for it, as I saw firsthand during a recent side trip to her (beautiful rain forest) neck of the woods in B.C. on my way to a month in Alaska.

Cindy, glad to have you aboard as somebody who likes SciScoop.  Pick a user name and join the regulars as we post away.  And congrats on your research – we’ve got an awful lot to learn about plants.  As a kid I was facinated by Venus Fly Traps and whatever hydraulics that made them work…perhaps someday you’ll take a crack at explaining how THAT works?  

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dwarfmistletoe

January 2nd, 2005 at 9:57 pm

O.K. – all is on! Excellent head of hair, rj. Well done. So what is trolling?

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Sweetwind

January 3rd, 2005 at 8:40 am

Ah, you read the “Trolling is not tolerated here” at the top of the posting page, eh? I would define trolling as posting an outrageous comment which you don’t even necessarily believe, just to get people all riled up. Profanity might be involved. As usual, the Wikipedia entry defines it better than I ever could. Oooh neat, I never realized it was a fishing metaphor. I always pictured stinky ogres who lurk under bridges, myself.

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dwarfmistletoe

January 5th, 2005 at 10:01 am

Ah! O.k. – thanks!

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rickyjames

January 16th, 2005 at 11:14 am

…it’s luxuriant, not luxurient.  A distinction that only a copy editor would care about.

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