Myrmecodia

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Myrmecodia
Myrmecodia platytyrea
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Rubiaceae
Genus: Myrmecodia
Jack
Species

Several, including:
Myrmecodia beccarii
Myrmecodia lamii
Myrmecodia platytyrea
Myrmecodia tuberosa

Synonyms
  • Epidendroides Sol.
  • Mirmecodia Gaudich., orth. var.
  • Myrmecoides Elmer, orth. var.

Myrmecodia is a genus of epiphytic myrmecophytes (ant plants) native to Southeast Asia and large islands extending south to Queensland in Australia. Myrmecodia plants grow in tree branches and on trunks. In nature, Myrmecodia tubers often grow hanging downward on bare branches without significant amounts of substrate, and thus depend upon symbiosis for most nutriment. The plants store food and water in a greyish brown caudex that swells and grows spines over time. The thick, unbranched stems are covered in clypeoli and alveoli which also grow spines and are densely filled with dry bracts.

From the alveoli emerge uninteresting white flowers which can self-pollinate to yield a bright orange, fleshy berry filled with up to six small seeds. Seed dispersal is by birds, that often deposit droppings on the branches and trunks of trees they land on.[1] In this they resemble various parasitic plants such as the mistletoes in families such as Loranthaceae, Santalaceae, and Misodendraceae, but Myrmecodia species are unrelated to the true parasites, being in the coffee- and gardenia family Rubiaceae. Nor are they known to be significantly parasitic themselves, in spite of being epiphytes; their well-developed leaves, plus their adaptations to mutualism with ants, suggest that they use the plants on which they grow mainly for support and escape from deep shade on the forest floor.[citation needed]

They form a symbiotic relationship with ants[2] and fungi[citation needed]. Ant plants provide habitats for ant colonies high up into the forest canopy, protecting them from the elements and also predators because of the spines. Hollow, smooth-walled tunnels form within the caudex with external entrance holes, providing an above-ground home for ant colonies. Ants likewise provide defense for the plant and prevent tissue damage. Ant colonies also provide nutrients to the plants by leaving wastes within the tunnels inside the caudex. Special glands lining the tunnels then absorb nutriment for the plant. This symbiosis allows the plants to effectively gather nutrients (via the ants) from a much larger area than the roots ever could cover.[3] [4]

Native people in Vietnam and Papua New Guinea have been using it for generations to treat many ailments [citation needed].

Myrmecodia is derived from Greek myrmekodes meaning ant-like or full of ants.

Notes

  1. (needs ref)
  2. Wilson, Edward O., The Insect Societies, Publisher: Belknap Press 1971, ISBN 978-0-674-45490-3
  3. http://home.nc.rr.com/myrmecophyte/ecology.html
  4. Antplants Forum. Antplants Forum.
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