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Bug of the Week: The Story of a Plant

This week, instead of looking at just insects, we are going to take a close look at the flowers of an amazing plant.

red bird of paradise

This plant is commonly called “red bird of paradise” or “Pride of Barbados,” Caesalpinia pulcherrima. The flowers are a burst of vibrant color, almost like flames. As a photographer, I love the bizarre structures and shapes. As a scientist, I tend to start asking questions. While taking a few photographs, I became more and more curious about these remarkable flowers.

red bird of paradise

First I found honey bees and wasps walking over the buds in the upper center of the flower cluster, like they were gathering nectar.

honey bee

Sometimes plants have nectaries, the organs that produce the sweet fluid nectar, on places outside of the flower itself. I couldn’t find any text to support my idea, but I did find a photograph. After you click on this link, check the photograph carefully. Look for the whitish crystals at the bases of the interior buds. Looks to me like sweet nectar that has flowed from nectaries and then dried. By the way, nectaries found outside of the flower are called extrafloral nectaries by botanists.

Bees and wasps were also visiting the flowers, so apparently the flowers provide nectar too. (There are some plants with flowers that provide only pollen).

Next I found small bees and flies that were rubbing on the long, hair-like projections.

flower fly

Those are the male parts of the flower, called the stamens. At the tip of each stamen (the stalk is called the filament) is the anther, which produces the pollen. Look at these flowers. To be pollinated, pollen must get from the anthers to the stigma, or female part of the flower. But first the pollinator must pick up the pollen. Just what kind of pollinator could pick up pollen from the long stalk-like stamens when its head was drinking nectar from the flower interior? The pollinator must be something fairly big by the looks.

Who are some possibilities? While watching I saw honey bees, carpenter bees, wasps, digger bees, flower flies and even a dragonfly lurking nearby. None of these seemed big enough.

dragonfly

The dragonfly was probably catching some of the small flies that were visiting the flowers for nectar.

Doing some research, I found that red bird of paradise flowers are pollinated by two different groups of animals. Scientists have shown that the red bird of paradise is pollinated by large butterflies, at least in some areas. Remember the pipevine swallowtail I showed last week?  Many of the swallowtails flutter their wings while feeding on nectar at flowers. The butterflies get the pollen on their wings while they are feeding by brushing up against the stamens, then pass off the pollen to the female part or stigma at the next flower they visit.

In addition to butterflies, hummingbirds also visit and pollinate this plant.

Next time you are in the tropics or other places where one of these astonishing plants grows, take a look at the incredible complexity of these unbelievable flowers.

One my favorite books about flowers for children is The Reason for a Flower by Ruth Heller. The illustrations are wonderful. The text is extremely detailed, even though it is in rhyme. How does she get all that information packed into so few words? Be aware there are two places where inaccuracies creep in. On one page she shows the male parts as an anther on a stamen as parallel to a the female parts of stigma on a style. Technically the entire male structure is called a stamen, so it probably should be “from an anther on a filament.” Towards the end she also calls a mushroom a plant, which is a very outdated classification scheme. Fungi are now in their own separate kingdom. Look past these technical slips and the book is overall still a gem.

Plasma: Another State of Matter?

Quick, what are the states of matter?

If you said solid, liquid and gas you are almost right. Almost? It turns out that many scientists now agree there is a fourth state of matter called plasma, and very possibly others. It is distinct from the other states of matter in its properties and it is extremely common. In fact it is the most abundant state of matter in the universe by far.

If it is so common, then why hasn’t everyone heard of it? Or if you have heard of it, why aren’t you really clear what it is?

One problem may be the term plasma. Plasma is a word also used for the fluid in blood that carries the cells and other materials from place to place. Same word, two very different meanings, but that happens all the time in the English language.

The state of matter plasma is a gas that has been energized so much some of its electrons have come flying off. It can also be called ionized gas, but that is confusing because it sounds like it is just a special kind of gas. Scientists have realized that plasma behaves differently from gas, and is a separate state.

To help you develop a better understanding, let’s look at some examples of plasma.

A flame is a simple form of plasma, where only a few of the gas molecules have lost their electrons and become ionized. Lightning is a much more intense form of plasma. The sun and stars are plasma.

You can even have plasma in your home, if you have any neon signs or lamps. You can also buy plasma balls. Inside the glass ball, electric fields pass through a gas that has been charged to make it plasma. Here is a YouTube video that shows one.

If your children are not very familiar with the concept of an atom, it might be a great time to review. One of my favorite demonstrations of atoms uses a pile of oranges and some tennis balls. The oranges are the protons and neutrons and they sit in the center of the atom. You can put a P or N on the oranges, too. The tennis balls are rather wacky and can bounce around all over the place. They are the electrons. If you have gone over the periodic chart, then find some actual elements to create using the atomic mass and atomic number. Choose a simple gas like helium, which has 2 protons, 2 electrons and 2 neutrons. Relate your atom to the gas found in balloons that makes them float.

Once you have created a few atoms, now you can strip away the tennis balls, leaving the oranges. Now you have created plasma, a gas that has lost some of its electrons and has become charged or ionized. Note: not all the electrons need to be lost, and not all the atoms have to lose electrons. Only a few lost will be enough.

The Coalition for Plasma Science has educational materials and links to other websites.

I also found a fun game to help understand plasma by sorting items into the different states of matter at the Space Weather Center.

Here are a few plasma balls you can buy for your own experimentation in various sizes and prices. Just remember they are made of glass, and be careful with plasma balls around young children.

Plasma Ball 3.5 Inch USB or Battery Operated

Plasma Globe

(Amazon Affiliate Links)

Quick Cat Science Update

For those of you who have doing the cat science projects, try adding coffee to the smells experiment. I accidentally dropped a few coffee beans of the floor yesterday and my cat went wild for them. See how your cat reacts to coffee and tea and let me know. By the way, chocolate can make dogs and cats very sick, so avoid letting your animals eat any.

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