Botany under the Mistletoe.Twisters, spitters, and other flowery flow·er·y adj. flow·er·i·er, flow·er·i·est 1. Of, relating to, or suggestive of flowers: a flowery perfume. 2. Abounding in or covered with flowers. 3. thoughts for romantic moments A holiday merrymaker mer·ry·mak·ing n. 1. Participation in festive activities. 2. a. A festivity; a revelry. b. Festive activities. mer loitering Loitering (IPA pronunciation: ['lɔɪtəˌrɪŋ] is an intransitive verb meaning to stand idly, to stop numerous times, or to delay and procrastinate. under the mistletoe mistletoe, common name for the Loranthaceae, a family of chiefly tropical hemiparasitic herbs and shrubs with leathery evergreen leaves and waxy white berries. They have green leaves, but they manufacture only part of the nutrients they require. may not be thinking much about parasitic plants. That's a loss, because the world's mistletologists are making wondrous findings about the more than 1,300 species they study. Some of the plants have flowers with trick openings. Some shoot their seeds farther than most watermelon watermelon, plant (Citrullus vulgaris) of the family Curcurbitaceae (gourd family) native to Africa and introduced to America by Africans transported as slaves. Watermelons are now extensively cultivated in the United States and are popular also in S Russia. spitters can spout. Some mistletoes grow as parasites on other parasitic mistletoes. And some give North Americans and Australians yet another way to misunderstand each other. All in all, when you bump into someone under a suspended sprig, there's a lot more to say than "Kiss me, you fool." "I can get rhapsodic rhap·sod·ic also rhap·sod·i·cal adj. 1. Of, resembling, or characteristic of a rhapsody. 2. Immoderately impassioned or enthusiastic; ecstatic. very quickly," says Job Kuijt of the University of Victoria in British Columbia British Columbia, province (2001 pop. 3,907,738), 366,255 sq mi (948,600 sq km), including 6,976 sq mi (18,068 sq km) of water surface, W Canada. Geography . He ranks certain mistletoes among the world's most beautiful plants. True, he's devoted decades to working out their classification and might be suspected of a certain bias. Yet he's sure that most people would be wowed by the 11-inch-long tubular red-and-yellow flowers of a rare mistletoe in Ecuador and Peru or a more common species that ornaments the coast of Chile with great billows of pink and white flowers. And then, there's the Christmas mistletoe. What's to marvel at there? Viscum album Viscum album, n See mistletoe. Viscum album a plant in the family Loranthaceae. Called also European mistletoe. Contains tyramine and causes incoordination, salivation and pupillary dilatation followed by paralysis and death. , the holiday mainstay in England, puts out flowers no bigger than a pea and sprouts white berries. In North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , most holiday mistletoe comes from the equally modest genus Phoradendron Noun 1. genus Phoradendron - any of various American parasitic plants similar to Old World mistletoe: false mistletoe Phoradendron dilleniid dicot genus - genus of more or less advanced dicotyledonous trees and shrubs and herbs . No, that's not what Kuijt means at all. For a spectacular holiday-season mistletoe, one has to go to southwestern Australia. There, what people call the Christmas bush grows into a tree up to 30 feet high and flares into orange-yellow blooms around December. Whereas most mistletoe plants are bits of shrubby shrub·by adj. shrub·bi·er, shrub·bi·est 1. Consisting of, planted with, or covered with shrubs. 2. Of or resembling a shrub. fluff parasitizing trees, Australia's Nuytsia floribunda--itself a tree--grows an underground network that parasitizes smaller plants, such as grass and even the domesticated do·mes·ti·cate tr.v. do·mes·ti·cat·ed, do·mes·ti·cat·ing, do·mes·ti·cates 1. To cause to feel comfortable at home; make domestic. 2. To adopt or make fit for domestic use or life. 3. a. garden carrot. The various Christmas bushes raise the question of just what botanists mean by mistletoe. It's not a strict taxonomic term in the sense that holly means one of the plants belonging to the genus Ilex. Mistletoes represent some, but far from all, of the flowering plant flowering plant Any of the more than 250,000 species of angiosperms (division Magnoliophyta) having roots, stems, leaves, and well-developed conductive tissues (xylem and phloem). order Santalales. The order is named for the renowned fragrance source, sandalwood sandalwood, name for several fragrant tropical woods, especially for Santalum album, an evergreen partially parasitic tree either native to India or introduced there centuries ago. , which is a parasite but not a mistletoe. Mistletoe generally refers to those shrubby, parasitic cousins of sandalwood that poke into their hosts aboveground instead of attacking roots. The Australian Christmas bush and several other oddballs
The Oddballs is a comedy act in the United Kingdom. It is best known for their "Naked Balloon Dance". It has caused controversy, including an attempt to ban the show from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk. therefore don't quite fit the pattern. However, they're such close kin to standard mistletoes that botanists lump them into the group, anyway. With their varied qualifications, 1,306 species have made it into the mistletoe club, according to Dan Nickrent of Southern Illinois University Southern Illinois University, main campus at Carbondale; state supported; coeducational; est. 1869, opened 1874 as a normal school, renamed 1947. It has a center for archaeological investigation and a fisheries research laboratory. There is also a campus at Edwardsville. in Carbondale. He would like to know how their odd lifestyle came about. At this year's Western International Forest Disease Work Conference in Kona, Hawaii, he reported on his ongoing genetic analysis of mistletoes. Nickrent and his colleagues compared DNA sequences from representatives of all the big groups of mistletoes. By clustering plants with similar sequences, he drew a most-probable pedigree. It indicates that the mistletoe lifestyle evolved independently at least five times, says Nickrent. Members of Viscaceae, the family of holiday cheer in North America and Europe, seem to have arisen from just one of these origins. A different origin gave rise to a family called Misodendraceae, Nickrent suggests. This family's scaly scal·y adj. 1. Covered or partially covered with scales. 2. Shedding scales or flakes; flaking. scaly skin condition characterized by scales; scalelike. sprigs jut out of the branches of South American beech trees, and in blooming season, the female plants of several species grow silky blonde hair--swinging whisks of yellow filaments several inches long. In all of the plant kingdom, parasitism parasitism: see parasite. parasitism Relationship between two species in which one benefits at the expense of the other. Ectoparasites live on the body surface of the host; endoparasites live in their hosts' organs, tissues, or cells and often rely evolved on nine separate occasions, says Kuijt, who wrote the classic Biology of Parasitic Flowering Plants (1969, University of California Press "UC Press" redirects here, but this is also an abbreviation for University of Chicago Press University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing. ). The mistletoe lineage arose from just one of these beginnings, he says. Mistletoes' attacks--as good a place as any to start tracing their life cycle--usually begin with a seed hitching a ride on or in an animal, usually a bird. For instance, the seeds of the European mistletoe spend about 30 minutes in transit as they pass through a bird called a mistletoe thrush thrush, in medicine thrush, in medicine, infection caused by the fungus Candida albicans, manifested by white, slightly raised patches on the mucous membrane of the tongue, mouth, and throat. . A trip through a more specialized mistletoe-eating bird, such as one of the Indonesian flowerpeckers, can take only 4 minutes. A species of Chilean mockingbird provides most of the transport for a mistletoe called quintral or Tristerix aphyllus. This plant requires the rather large favor of being deposited on the spiny spiny sharp spines protrude. spiny amaranth amaranthusspinosum. spiny anteater see echidna. spiny clotburr xanthiumspinosum. spiny emex see emex australis. surface of a cactus. An oddity even among mistletoes, quintral lives almost entirely deep inside the sugar-transporting tissue of the cactus. The mistletoe shows itself only during the Chilean winter, when its brilliant red tubular flowers burst out of the cactus column. When the quintral mistletoe berries ripen rip·en tr. & intr.v. rip·ened, rip·en·ing, rip·ens To make or become ripe or riper; mature. See Synonyms at mature. rip to a pale pink, birds dodge the spines to nab a feast. The diners often deposit seeds for the next generation on cacti that already host some quintrals. Even a near miss that just snags a seed on a spine works for the quintral. The seeds germinate within a day of arrival, and each sends out a red strand that can extend a millimeter or two a day for up to 8 weeks or until it reaches the main body of its host. Could mistletoe mooching push the cactus to evolve ways to discourage birds from dropping seeds on it? In the June ECOLOGY, Rodrigo Medel of Universidad de Chile in Santiago reported that the quintral might be driving at least one host species toward longer spines. Among the big columns of the cactus Echinopsis chilensis, the plants with the longest spines had the fewest and shortest visits from perching birds. From the cactus' point of view, that must seem a trend worth encouraging, Medel notes, because mistletoe-ridden plants produced less than half the seeds of uninfected plants. In Eulychnia acida, the other cactus host that Medel studied, mistletoe infection didn't seem to sabotage reproductive success. The underlying difference isn't clear, and Medel warns against oversimplifying notions about relationships among hosts, parasites, and their carriers. A few mistletoes "have emancipated e·man·ci·pate tr.v. e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing, e·man·ci·pates 1. To free from bondage, oppression, or restraint; liberate. 2. themselves from birds," as Kuijt puts it. Australia's Christmas bush needs only a breeze to deliver its winged seeds. In the Northern Hemisphere, dwarf mistletoes (Arceuthobium) depend on tiny, green, exploding fruits that can shoot a seed 24 meters per second. When the seeds mature, at only a few millimeters long, the flower reaches an explosive point where a slight jiggle prompts it to launch its seeds for distances that commonly extend 5 m and can reach 15 m. It's a silent shot--people strolling in the woods don't hear popping mistletoe. By developing a sharp eye for flowers, Kuijt has learned to identify blossoms about to pop and gives them a gentle prod. For the next stage of a freeloader's life, settling into a host, mistletoes have some advantages over many other parasitic plants. Mistletoes tend toward the generalist's rather than the specialist's style of attack, Kuijt says. The European Christmas mistletoe takes up residence on any of more than 200 plant species, and a distant relative, Dendrophthoe falcata, infiltrates at least 343 host species. Some mistletoe species, however, live on a more restricted diet of hosts. The dwarfs specialize in conifers, sometimes only a single species. Botanists have found three small mistletoes almost exclusively on other species in the group. A report from the 1920s even describes a parasite triple-decker: one mistletoe attacking a second, which grew on a third. And the third grew on a tree. Kuijt argues that people often shift host relations for one of South America's most entertaining mistletoes, Gaiadendron punctatum. This glossy-leafed beauty with long, slim, yellow trumpet flowers inhabits the rainforest's roof garden atop giant, old trees. The mistletoe doesn't sink its strands into the supporting tree but preys on other plants specialized to perch in the canopy. As people clear these grand forests, the Gaiadendron isn't dying out. Instead, it often grows as a tree itself, still parasitizing small plants, but on the ground. Kuijt has encountered one such mistletoe tree with a trunk more than 25 centimeters in diameter. After arriving on a host, a typical mistletoe seed's first exploratory root grows away from light, and once in shadow, grows upward. When it bumps into something--in the best case, a young branch--the mistletoe sends in special wedge tissue in search of the plumbing. Hitting the host's network of water-carrying cells deep inside the plant, the mistletoe builds its own system of ducts to steal water and nutrients. With their parasitic lifestyle, mistletoes kick up a mix of emotions in people. While some observers are struck by the plants' beauty and ingenuity, others worry about the well-being of the hosts. All the sapping of host resources disturbs pathologist Brian Geils of the U.S. Forest Service's Rocky Mountain Research Station at Flagstaff Flagstaff, city (1990 pop. 45,857), seat of Coconino co., N Ariz., near the San Francisco Peaks; inc. 1894. Lumbering, ranching, and a lively tourist trade thrive in the region, where many ruined pueblos, numerous state parks, several lakes, and large pine forests , Ariz. He's one of the editors of a guide to dwarf mistletoes, Agriculture Handbook 709 (http:// www.rms.nau.edu/mistletoe/). Geils, who describes his job as "public health for trees," frets that these parasites are getting out of hand. Mistletoes attack young trees more readily than they infiltrate thick-barked oldsters. The dwarf mistletoes prey on conifers primarily in western North America. "We probably have a lot more young trees than we used to," Geils says. Logging, replanting, and other reshaping of the landscape have shifted the balance away from old-growth granddaddies toward arboreial teenagers. Also, suppressing forest fires has reduced natural pruning of dwarf mistletoes. People passing through a forest may dismiss mistletoes as relatively harmless frills Frills see frilled. on the trees, since these parasites don't seem to do much damage. "The tree's got to sit out there for 100, 200 years," Geils protests. A human being just doesn't have the attention span to understand the destruction under way, he says. Dwarf mistletoes can weaken or kill trees by sapping their resources and making them easy targets for marauding ma·raud v. ma·raud·ed, ma·raud·ing, ma·rauds v.intr. To rove and raid in search of plunder. v.tr. To raid or pillage for spoils. insects such as bark beetles, Geils warns. Also, the mistletoe's growth compounds can send a tree into a tizzy tiz·zy n. pl. tiz·zies Slang A state of nervous excitement or confusion; a dither. [Origin unknown. of sprouting weird, ultradense foliage called witches' brooms. Neither beetles nor brooms please the timber industry. A survey by the Canadian Forestry Service blames dwarf mistletoes for the loss of wood worth roughly $1 billion (U.S.) each year in North America. Discouraging the growth of dwarf mistletoes has not turned out to be an easy matter, Geils says. Plenty of herbicides could kill the parasite--and the tree to which they're intimately connected. Cutting down infected trees would slow the spread, Geils says. However, such proposals have proved contentious and even provoked suits by citizens with a different view. For one thing, the witches brooms improve bird habitat. Forests with abundant brooms have three times as many cavity-nesting birds as other forests do, according to studies in several states. And research published in 1995 found that the Mexican spotted owl, a species listed as threatened in the United States, prefers mistletoe-infected tree stands to uninfected ones. Some people oppose cutting down trees because they don't want to be left with stumps, and others see mistletoe as a natural force in the forest. Mistletoe "is quite the political hot potato around here," Geils sighs. He's pinning his hopes on work by Simon Shamoun at the Canadian Forestry Centre in Victoria. Shamoun has found two fungi that don't hurt trees but kill mistletoes. Colletotrichum gloeosporiodes strikes the leaves and stems, and Nectria neomacrospora attacks the parasite's tissues inside the host. Shamoun plans to combine them in a mistletoe-control cocktail. On the far side of the world, Dave Kelly and other New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. ecologists are working to save mistletoes. In the austral summer, Peraxilla tetrapetala bristles with clusters of narrow, hot-pink buds, which eventually open upside-down. The petals stay connected at their tips but split apart from each other at the stem end. Kuijt's ended his 1969 account of the flower, "We cannot even guess at the meaning of this bizarre performance." Kelly and Jenny Ladley, both at the University of Canterbury
Bellbirds and tuis have the knack. It turns out that some small bees can wrestle the flowers partially open to get at pollen. This is the first instance in which scientists have found invertebrates that can work trick flowers apparently tailored for vertebrates (SN: 12/21&28/96, p. 390). The bees prove as effective as the birds in pollinating blooms, according to recent observations. Unfortunately, competent birds and bees have grown so scarce at two sites on the South Island of New Zealand that the twist-off mistletoe and a close relative, lacking sufficient pollination pollination, transfer of pollen from the male reproductive organ (stamen or staminate cone) to the female reproductive organ (pistil or pistillate cone) of the same or of another flower or cone. , have seen their seed output drop by 90 percent, reported Kelly, Ladley, and their colleagues in the June 1999 CONSERVATION BIOLOGY. Worldwide, more than 20 species of mistletoes have ended up in the endangered category of the Red List of the Switzerland-based World Conservation Union, or IUCN IUCN International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. . The London-based Plantlife and other British conservation organizations issued a more cheerful report a year ago on the supply of England's traditional holiday mistletoe, V. album. As the first British mistletoe survey in 30 years, it found that the plant's old haunts--in apple orchards--indeed were shrinking. However, other niches seemed to be providing ample habitat. At least for the time being, no one has to worry about kissing that mistletoe good-bye. |
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