Complementary field and laboratory tests confirmed and quantified the pollination abilities of Tranes sp. weevils and Cycadothrips chadwicki thrips, specialist insects of their respective cycad hosts, Macrozamia machinii and M. lucida. No agamospermous seeds were produced when both wind and insects were excluded from female cones; and the exclusion of wind-vectored pollen alone did not eliminate seed set, because insects were able to reach the cone. Based on enclosure pollination tests, each weevil pollinates an average 26.2 ovules per cone and each thrips 2.4 ovules per cone. These pollinators visited similar numbers of ovules per cone in fluorescent dye tests that traced insect movement through cones. Fluorescent dye granules deposited by Cycadothrips were concentrated around the micropyle of each visited ovule, the site of pollen droplet release, where pollen must be deposited to achieve pollination. In contrast, Tranes weevils left dye scattered on different areas of each visited ovule, indicating that chance plays a greater role in this system. Each weevil and 25 thrips delivered 6.2 and 5.2 pollen grains, respectively, on average, to each visited ovule per cone, based on examination of dissected pollen canals. In sum, the pollination potential of 25 Cycadothrips approximates that of one Tranes weevil.
The possible reasons for the localised distribution of Macrozamia lucida Johnson in south-eastern Queensland were investigated through testing and quantifying aspects of seed dispersal, ex situ germination across local substrates and the spatial distribution of plants of different ages. Seeds of cones exposed to animals were moved significantly further (108.4 ± 13 cm, n = 10 cones) than those of cones not exposed to animals (49 ± 11 cm, n = 4). Only two mammal species interacted with seeds, common brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula) and bush rats (Rattus fuscipes), but relatively infrequently. The possums were both seed dispersers and predators, whereas the rats ate only sarcotesta. Seed predation and removal occurred at a constant but low rate at cones exposed to animals, compared with no seed removal at unexposed cones. Seeds with sarcotesta intact and sarcotesta alone suffered significantly higher rates of removal by mammals. Seeds in soil had a significantly higher rate of germination (50%) than those in gravel (24.4%) or leaf litter (25.6%) and partially buried seeds germinated at a significantly higher rate (51.2%) than those on the surface (23.2%) and those buried completely (25.6%). In summary, this population appears to be localised spatially by low rates of dispersal, restricted dispersal distance and limited sites for successful germination. The results are discussed in relation to the possible extinction of the original seed dispersers of these organisms and the limitations this imposes on these plants should they be exposed to an unfavourable climatic regime.
Cat's claw creeper, Macfadyena unguis-cati, a major environmental weed in coastal and sub-coastal areas of Queensland and New South Wales, Australia is a target for classical biological control. Host specificity of Hypocosmia pyrochroma Jones (Lep., Pyralidae), as a potential biological control agent was evaluated on the basis of no-choice and choice larval feeding and survival, and adult oviposition preference tests, involving 38 plant species in 10 families. In no-choice tests, larval feeding and development occurred only on cat's claw creeper. In choice tests, oviposition and larval development was evident only on cat's claw creeper. The results support the host-specificity tests conducted in South Africa, and suggest that H. pyrochroma is a highly specific biological control agent that does not pose any risk to non-target plants tested in Australia. This agent has been approved for field release by relevant regulatory authorities in Australia.
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