Saturday, June 23, 2012

Orchid Intra-familial Evolution


Orchidaceae as seen today has developed from a primitive stock and traversed through several lines of evolution at various stages of geological and geographical changes. Unlike in many plant families orchids do not have a fossil record. However several features in the living plants themselves, less complicated as they, are indicate the evolutionary track in this highly advanced group of plants.
The present day orchids are almost all monandrous i.e. with a single fertile anther. These have been derived from their counterpart with two or three fertile anthers, which are considered to be primitive. The evolutionary trend from the former form to the latter form can be seen in the vegetative form, floral structure (like the formation and the characters of the reproductive organs in the pollinia), the seed structure etc.
The orchids started living as terrestrials. In due course of time probably competetion for food in the land prompted some of them to migrate to the nearby bare tree trunks and branches for a spacious accommodation. The epiphytes were thus born at a later stage. These gradually perfected their modification in the several organs, mostly in the stem and the leaf, for better living.

Like in the general monocots, in the primitive orchids the leaves were mainly arranged spirally along the stem. The leaves gradually got reduced in numbers and they were arranged distichously and became articulate. Storage tissues were developed in the groups where it was necessary to store food, by making the leaves thick and leathery. The stem also developed special tissues for storage of food and became fleshy. In the terrestrials corms, tuberoids and rootstocks were the result of modification of the stems. In course of time the primitive multi-noded corms (Acanthephippium, Calanthe) gave rise to a form with a single node (Didicea, Tainia). In the epiphytic the sympodial form with uniformly thickened multinoded stem in Dendrobium, Eria and Thunia etc., gave rise to stems with a single node as in Bulbophyllum, Pholidota, etc.
The sympodial growth form of the stem with a limited or defmite annual growth and with formation of new lateral stem every year gave rise to the monopodial form of stem with unlimited or indefinite growth and a single growing point. Vanilla is the only terrestrial genus that is an extensive creeper with monopodial growth form. The usual terminal inflorescence was transformed to the lateral form. In the advanced monopodial form, lateral inflorescence became the rule.

In the orchid flower organization of the anther has played a very crucial role. In the immediate predecesser of Orchidaceae the six anthers were arranged in two alternating whorls of three each. The primitive orchids were basically of two types: (i) where the anthers of the outer whorl were suppressed - the triandrae and (ii) where the anthers in the inner whorl were suppressed — the diandrae in the lady's slipper orchids. With advancement there was further reduction of the anther and the monandrous form with only one fertile anther in the outer whorl came into being. Barring a few genera like Apostasia, Cypripedium and Paphiopedilum, all other genera found in India are monandrae.

The pollen grains in orchids, as has been said earlier, are united to definite masses called pollinia. The unicellular pollen grains have been variously united to give rise to simple, soft, mealy or granular pollinia, to sectile pollinia; or waxy to hard pollinia, naked or with various pollinial appendages, in the most advanced form. These characters are used in classification of Orchidaceae.
In the primitive form the single-celled pollen grains are free and contained in the four-locular anther in Apostasia (monads) or held by a viscous fluid as in Paphiopedilum and Cypripedium. In most cases the pollen grains are bundled into small units called tetrads. These tetrads in the primitive form are held by elastic threads and remain in a mealy or granular form under Spiranthoideae . Sometimes they are organized into granular packets known as sectile pollinia. Bases of these packets are prolonged into short or long tails that are pollinial in origin. Sectile pollinia are met in Spiranthoideae and Orchidoideae.

From a soft consistency in the primitive forms, the pollen tetrads tend to become gradually hard. In the less advanced form the tetrads are collected to firm masses called waxy pollinia. There are usually eight clavate pollen masses divided completely halfway between top and bottom, four masses in each cell, two smaller than the other two. This is met in Epidendroideae under the terrestrial genera Acanthephippium, Calanthe, Phaius etc. The pollinia is prolonged at base and held by a viscous or a pad-like mass formed from part of the rostellum. In the epiphytic form these waxy pollinia remain naked without prolongation or any appendages as in Eria (eight pollinia) or Bulbophyllum, Dendrobium, Oberonia .

In the process of advancement there was a tendency for further reduction of the number of pollen masses in the pollinium while getting harder. This is the case with Vandoideae. In the first case the pollinia got reduced to four laterally compressed discoid masses by the loss of four terminal masses. The pollinia here may be provided with appendages like caudicle, stipe or viscidium. The pollen masses were further reduced to hard or bony masses. They were usually notched, porate, foveolate or variously cleft; occasionally they were entire i.e. solid masses. These masses were provided with a well- developed appendage — the pollen kit consisting of caudicle, stipe and viscidium.

The epiphytic form in orchids is of later development. In this the monopodial growth form is of recent origin. Common ancestral form among the monopodial is a plant with strap-shaped or channelled thick leaves with usually large flowers. The lip here is without much ornamentation and the pollen apparatus is simple as seen in Vanda. From this form are evolved the advanced genera with reduction in size of the plant, leaf and of the flower. The lip developed complex outgrowths or callosities of various types; the pollen apparatus became more complex and specialized, the notched pollinia giving way to solid ones. With the complexity in floral organs, the flower has a tendency to become ephemeral. Chiloschista, Taeniophyllum etc. are a few genera where such reduction in the size of the plant, leaves and flower is observed. The plants have become aphyllous, the roots taking the functions of the leaves.

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