Download It grows on palms and can weigh more than a toddler

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Ecology of Banksia wikipedia , lookup

Plant stress measurement wikipedia , lookup

History of botany wikipedia , lookup

Botany wikipedia , lookup

Leaf wikipedia , lookup

Evolutionary history of plants wikipedia , lookup

Plant use of endophytic fungi in defense wikipedia , lookup

Seed wikipedia , lookup

Plant secondary metabolism wikipedia , lookup

Plant breeding wikipedia , lookup

Plant defense against herbivory wikipedia , lookup

Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup

Gartons Agricultural Plant Breeders wikipedia , lookup

Plant evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup

Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup

Plant reproduction wikipedia , lookup

Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Plant ecology wikipedia , lookup

Verbascum thapsus wikipedia , lookup

Sustainable landscaping wikipedia , lookup

Glossary of plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Plant nutrition wikipedia , lookup

Perovskia atriplicifolia wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Picture This: The world’s
biggest seed
It grows on palms and can weigh more than a toddler
BY
SUSAN MILIUS
7:00AM, MAY 21, 2015
A traveler shows off a massive coco-de-mer nut. This palm seed’s shape isn’t obvious until an outer green husk is
stripped off. Photo credit: Niall Corbet

EMail

Print

Twitter

Facebook

Reddit

Google+
The secret behind the world’s largest seed is leaves that serve as good gutters. During rains,
they channel lots of water and nutrients right to the plant’s thirsty roots.
Coco-de-mer palms (Lodoicea maldivica) produce these monster nuts, which are a type of
seed. The biggest can tip the scales at up to 18 kilograms (roughly 40 pounds). That’s about as
much as a 4-year-old boy. Yet the palm outperforms all other plants — at least in seed heft —
with a below-poverty diet. These plants grow wild on nutrient-starved, rocky soil on just two
islands in the Seychelles. (They’re part of an arc of some 115 islands in the Indian Ocean, off of
the East Coast of Africa.)
Christopher Kaiser-Bunbury works for the Seychelles Islands Foundation. Despite a scarcity of
nutrients to fuel its growth, a palm forest is “magnificent — it’s like a dinosaur could come
around the corner,” he says. Winds can jostle hectares (acres) of stiff leaves. This makes a
sound he describes as “crackling.”
Nitrogen and phosphorus are two natural fertilizers — nutrients — that these (and other plants)
need. There isn’t much of either on the islands where these palms grow. So the plants are
frugal. They sprout fronds using only about one-third the nutrients needed by leaves of 56
neighboring species of trees and shrubs. What’s more, coco-de-mer palms scavenge a lot of the
nutrients shed in their own dying leaves. These trees can reuse 90 percent of that prized
phosphorus from the fronds it’s about to drop. That’s a record for the plant world, report KaiserBunbury and his colleagues in the May New Phytologist.
Creating its monster seeds uses up about 85 percent of this plant's supplies of phosphorus, the
biologists estimate. And the palms manage this, the researchers conclude, thanks to drainage.
The palm’s curving leaves easily can span 2 meters (6.6 feet). Creases in them make the
leaves resemble folded paper fans. Any rains falling on them will funnel down the stems. That
water washes animal droppings, stray pollen and other materials — a nutrient windfall — off of
the palm and onto its hungry roots.
Each giant seed takes a long time to grow, about six years. But that won’t happen until the palm
first reaches plant “puberty.” On the nutrient-poor ground, this reproductive coming-of-age may
take 80 to 100 years. Only then can one of these palms yield its first seed. Throughout a female
coco-de-mer palm’s life of several hundred years, it may bear only about 100 seeds.
Few of those monster coconuts will get a chance to replenish the dwindling coco-de-mer
forests, however. Kaiser-Bunbury calculates that 20 to 30 percent of the endangered species’
seeds must sprout to keep the forests growing and healthy. But that hasn’t been happening. Nut
poachers have been illegally kidnapping the seeds. Then they grind them into a powder that
they sell.
Power Words
fertilizer Nitrogen and other plant nutrients added to soil, water or foliage to boost crop growth
or to replenish nutrients that removed earlier by plant roots or leaves.
nitrogen A colorless, odorless and nonreactive gaseous element that forms about 78 percent
of Earth's atmosphere. Its scientific symbol is N. Nitrogen is released in the form of nitrogen
oxides as fossil fuels burn.
nut (in biology) The edible seed of a plant, which is usually encased in a hard protective shell.
nutrients Vitamins, minerals, fats, carbohydrates and proteins needed by organisms to live,
and which are extracted through the diet.
palm A type of evergreen tree that sprouts a crown of large fan-shaped leaves. Most of the
roughly 2,600 different species of palms are tropical or semitropical.
phytology
A field of biology devoted to the scientific study of plants.
poach (in ecology) To illegally hunt and take a wild animal or plant. People who do this are
referred to as poachers.
phosphorus A highly reactive, nonmetallic element occurring naturally in phosphates. Its
scientific symbol is P.
puberty A developmental period in humans and other primates when the body undergoes
hormonal changes that will result in the maturation of reproductive organs.
scavenge To collect something useful from what had been discarded as waste or trash.
shrub A perennial plant that grows in a generally low, bushy form.