After
you notice one, you start seeing them everywhere. As I hiked toward the Juniper
Rock Overlook on the North Country Trail, a chilly breeze gusted out of the
sunny blue sky. This spring has been slower than some, and I couldn’t wait to
see some flowers. Not far down the trail, a cluster of pale purple hepaticas
bloomed atop hairy stems.
Hepaticas have hairy stems to keep them safe during surprise spring snowstorms! Photo by Emily Stone. |
After
photographing the hepaticas, I moved on to trying to capture the tiny crimson
petals thrusting out of the bud on a beaked hazelnut twig. A single leatherleaf
shrub in bloom with delicate yellow flowers brought similar excitement. When I
noticed the triumvirate of trillium leaves flanking a tightly furled bud, I was
thrilled.
Trillium bud, photo by Emily Stone |
Bloodroot, photo by Emily Stone |
As
my eyes adjusted, my mental search images honed, and the green spikes and clusters
of leaves appeared everywhere. Finally, I also spotted the lovely white
blossoms of spring beauties with varying amounts of pink pinstripes.
Spring beauties, Photo by Emily Stone |
These spring ephemeral wildflowers have figured out that they can make use of the rich soil in the shady depths of deciduous forests, so long as they get a head start on the trees. In part because they only show up for such a short time each spring, they have captured many a heart.
In
addition, many of these flowers have a close, symbiotic relationship with ants.
You don’t see it now, but in a month or so, when they are done blooming and
have gone to seed, a soap opera emerges. All the wildflowers I listed above
attach a packet of fatty goodness, like a donut for ants, to the outside of
their seeds. Called an elaiosome, this little bit of energy-rich lipids, amino
acids, and other nutrients, shows that the way into an ant’s hill is through
its stomach.
Seed pod and elaiosomes of trillium. Photo by Emily Stone. |
|
Ants
carry the elaiosome, still attached to its seed, down into their hill. There
the ants may feed it to their larvae or eat it themselves. The seed, which is
smooth, hard, tough to hold on to, and impossible to eat, is thrown into the
ants’ midden or garbage heap. Here, in a nitrogen- and phosphorus-rich
environment, among moist, decaying plant matter and the bodies of dead ants,
the seed has a wonderful place to grow. It is safe from birds, other insects,
and even forest fires. This type of ant-assisted seed dispersal is called
myrmecochory.
Myrmecochory
(mur–me-co-cory) is exhibited by more than 3,000 plant species worldwide, and
is present in every major biome on all continents except Antarctica. One study
determined that it has evolved at least 100 separate times in 55 different
plant families.
In
nature, when there is success, there is often a cheater. Hepatica, a beautiful
purple or white spring ephemeral flower that emerges before its leaves, is an
unassuming swindler. Instead of providing a detachable treat for the ant,
hepatica just covers its seed in a non-removable elaiosome with the same
chemical cues as its neighbors’ true elaiosomes.
When
ants take hepatica’s seeds back to the nest, the elaiosome can’t be eaten, and
the chemical cues stay intact. Instead of being stripped of its packet of fatty
goodness and thrown in the trash heap, the hepatica seed stimulates each ant
that passes by to pick it up by the permanently perfumed handle and carry it
somewhere else. Hepatica saves energy by not making a large elaiosome, and it
benefits when its seeds are distributed more widely. In return for their
dispersal services, the ants get nothing. Hepatica is a parasite!
If
cheaters win, though, then pretty soon everyone starts cheating. For a
mutualism (a symbiotic relationship where both parties benefit) to continue, it
must provide appropriate rewards. Scientists have found that seeds with true,
tasty, edible elaiosomes are transported by ants much more often than the
cheater seeds of Hepatica and others like it. “In this situation, cheating …
establishes a background against which better mutualists can display
competitive superiority, thus leading…to the reinforcement of the mutualism
(Pfeiffer et al, 2009).”
Such
drama, on what may seem like a small scale, impacts entire ecosystems on six
continents. In this northern hardwood forest, maple leaves cushioned my knees
as I crouched down to get look closer at the just-opened flowers of Dutchman’s
breeches. A bit of movement caught the corner of my eye, and I shifted my focus
to a patch of soft moss. A tiny black ant was scrambling its way across a
jungle of leaves. As my gaze widened, I noticed another ant, and then another
and another, all busy with their own lives. After you notice one, you start
seeing them everywhere.
Dutchman's Breeches, Photo by Emily Stone. |
Note: Portions of this
article are reprinted from a 2013 Natural Connections article, which is now a
chapter in Emily’s first book.
Emily’s second book, Natural
Connections:
Dreaming of an Elfin Skimmer, is now available to purchase at www.cablemuseum.org/books and will soon be available at your local independent
bookstore, too.
For 50 years, the Cable Natural History Museum has served to
connect you to the Northwoods. Come visit us in Cable, WI! Our new Curiosity
Center kids’ exhibit is now open, and the Grand Opening is on May 25!
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