Seed parasites control development in Douglas-fir seeds
A seed is a wonderful place to live if you are a small insect.
Protected by the seed coat and the fruit or cone, nourished by storage
compounds like starch and fats, a developing insect has everything it
needs. Many insects oviposit (plant eggs) directly into developing
embryos. If an insect makes the wrong choice and oviposits into an
unfertilized ovule, the developing insect may be out of luck. In
conifers, unfertilized ovules become empty seeds, and the tree puts no
resources into empty seeds.
Patrick von Aderkas of the University of Victoria and his colleagues found that some insects can avoid making the wrong choice by making the plant feed a larva even if the ovule was not fertilized. A tiny chalcid wasp, Megastigmus spermotrophus (Hymenoptera: Torymidae), deposits eggs in Douglas-fir ovules before they are fertilized. As the wasp larva develops, resources are directed to the seed just as if it had been fertilized. Instead of depending on the tree to supply resources to a fertilized see, Megastigmus manipulates seed development to its own advantages.
von Aderkas P et al 2005 Seed parasitism redirects ovule development in Douglas fir. Proc. Royal Society B Early Online Publishing
Patrick von Aderkas of the University of Victoria and his colleagues found that some insects can avoid making the wrong choice by making the plant feed a larva even if the ovule was not fertilized. A tiny chalcid wasp, Megastigmus spermotrophus (Hymenoptera: Torymidae), deposits eggs in Douglas-fir ovules before they are fertilized. As the wasp larva develops, resources are directed to the seed just as if it had been fertilized. Instead of depending on the tree to supply resources to a fertilized see, Megastigmus manipulates seed development to its own advantages.
von Aderkas P et al 2005 Seed parasitism redirects ovule development in Douglas fir. Proc. Royal Society B Early Online Publishing