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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Floral scent in a sexually deceptive Ophrys orchid: from headspace collections to solvent extractions

Maurizio SajevaSergio RosselliPietro ZitoMaurizio BrunoAntonella Maggio

subject

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineAndrenapollinationPollinationAndrenaPlant ScienceFlowers01 natural sciencesGas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry03 medical and health sciencesPollinatorvolatile organic compoundsBotanyOphrys panormitanaOrchidaceaeOphrysOrchidaceaebiologySettore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organicabiology.organism_classificationPseudocopulation030104 developmental biologyOdorantsSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataKovats retention indexGas chromatography010606 plant biology & botanyResearch Paper

description

Sexually deceptive orchid flowers use visual, tactile and olfactory cues of female insects in order to attract males of one or a few closely related species as pollinators. Ophrys L. is the most species-rich genus of sexually deceptive orchids in the Mediterranean Basin. Despite Ophrys pollinated by Andrena male bees use alkanes and mainly alkenes with specific double-bond positions as key signals that trigger pseudocopulatory behavior, some volatile organic compounds (VOCs) with low molecular weight were found as long-range attractants non-eliciting copulatory behavior. Since floral scents in Ophrys have been extensively studied by solvent extractions here we aimed to understand which floral volatiles are found when two different collection methods are used in Ophrys panormitana flowers. By knowing their chemical composition, we could better understand the scent chemistry of this Ophrys species without overlooking VOCs which could also have a function in its pollination biology. Scent samples collected by dynamic headspace and by solvent extraction were analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). The floral scent of O. panormitana is composed by a bouquet of VOCs with lower and higher molecular weights. The headspace samples contained VOCs with higher volatility (mainly one aliphatic alcohol and two aliphatic ketones) whereas the solvent extracts were composed by VOCs with lower volatility (exclusively long-chain alkanes and alkenes). Overlapping in VOCs between headspace and solvent samples were not found. For the first time Andrena nigroaenea was observed during the pseudocopulation and removing the pollinaria of a flower of O. panormitana. Abbreviations: VOCs, volatile organic compounds; GC/MS, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; KRI, Kovats Retention Indices.

10.1080/15592324.2018.1552056http://hdl.handle.net/10447/337069