A. A typical Nepenthes habitat in Southeast Asia
B. New research findings regarding the life cycle of Nepenthes plants
C. New research findings regarding the life cycle of Nepenthes plants
D. An unusual characteristic of some species of Nepenthes plants
我的笔记 编辑笔记
查看听力原文
listen to part of a lecture in a botany class.
So we\'ve been looking at varieties of carnivorous plant species,
plants that capture and consume insects.
And today I\'d like to introduce another
one that\'s often referred to as the pitcher plant.
The scientific name for the pitcher plant is Nepenthes.
The 100 or so species of Nepenthes found in the forests of Southeast Asia have a variety of shapes and sizes,
but since the soil there generally lacks adequate nutrients,
these plants need to supplement the nutritional intake of their roots.
And how do they do this?
Well, they have pitchers, modified leaves that are filled with fluid that act as traps for insects,
which fall into this fluid and are digested there to supply additional nutrition for the plant.
Now, at first, it appears that the Nepenthes method of catching prey, mostly ants, is pretty basic,
that the pitcher part of the plant is a passive pitfall trap that any unsuspecting ant might just slip down into.
And this has been the long held view of botanists,
but investigation in the forests of Borneo has revealed that some Nepenthes are far more active in catching their prey than previously thought.
Okay, first of all, there\'s a rim around the top of the pitcher.
This is called the Para stone.
And along the inside of the Para stone are glands that secrete a sweet nectar that
well, it\'s the smell of this nectar that lures the prey into the pitcher
and inside the pitcher just below the peristome, botanists noticed a waxy layer, one that\'s smooth and slippery,
and as insects climb inside to get the nectar,
this waxy layer prevents them from maintaining a foothold,
so they fall into the liquid below and are unable to climb back up and escape.
For a long time, this waxy zone was thought to be essential for the plant to trap its prey,
but recently, observation of these plants in the lab revealed that insects often fall into the pitcher without ever touching the waxy layer,
and Even more surprising was the discovery that some species of Nepenthes don\'t even have this layer.
That\'s right, some species have this layer, but others don\'t,
and the species without the waxy layer are just as effective at catching prey.
Well, botanists were curious about this, of course,
so some of them went into the forests of Borneo to videotape plants like these ones without a waxy lair,
and they observed again and again that most of the ants that climbed onto a Nepenthes parastome Simply wandered off again unharmed.
But one day, the researchers returned to the study site after a rainstorm
and were surprised to see that every ant that stepped onto one of these peristomes slipped right down into the pitcher,
and when they looked into the pitcher, they noticed lots of ants already trapped there.
They also observed that the parastomes were wet,
which is unusual, since plant surfaces usually repel water.
But it turns out that when the parastome of one of these Nepenthes plants is wet.
It holds water so its surface gets extremely slippery,
and insects slide right off and drop down into the trap.
And the researchers discovered something else too,
that the parastomes were wet from early evening until early morning, whether it was raining or not.
And this didn\'t seem to be simply the result of water condensing from the air as it got cooler.
Researchers also noticed an increase in the amount of nectar produced in the evening,
and tests showed that nectar absorbs moisture from the air,
and this helps keep the rim wet.
One researcher suggested yet another possibility,
a plant may even regulate the degree of wetness by changing the amount of nectar it secretes hard to believe.
Well, there\'s more.
Most botanists had assumed that carnivorous plants were always ready to catch prey,
but here we have a plant with a trapping mechanism that is dependent, or at least in part on the weather,
and that sometimes works and sometimes doesn\'t.
How could that be effective?
Well, some of these researchers hypothesize
that it\'s for the same reason some animals hunt only intermittently
to make it more difficult for prey to predict their attacks,
because then prey could develop countermeasures to avoid them.
For example, ants often send lone scouts out to search for food.
If a scout finds some and returns unharmed, it alerts other ants, which then stream out to find the source of the food.
It\'s possible that when these ants reach the Nepenthes plant, its peristone will be wet,
so instead of finding food,
they\'ll be the Nepenthes main course.