Plantwatch: oldest known seed plants heat up for sex to attract pollinating insects
Cycads are ancient palm-like plants that appeared 275m years ago, long before flowering plants evolved
Cycads are ancient palm-like plants that appeared 275m years ago, long before flowering plants evolved. They are also the oldest known seed plants pollinated by insects, but despite their ancient roots they have an ingenious knack of advertising themselves to beetles – they heat up for sex, quite possibly the oldest signal in plants to attract pollinating insects.
Cycads have separate male and female plants, with their sex organs held on cones. When the reproductive organs are ready for sex, they can warm up by more than 10C above their surroundings by cranking up their metabolism using a dense array of energy-producing mitochondria.
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© Photograph: Courtesy of Ventnor Botanic Garden

© Photograph: Courtesy of Ventnor Botanic Garden

© Photograph: Courtesy of Ventnor Botanic Garden