Sunday, 19 November 2017

New Parasitic plant (Gleadovia konyakianorum) found in Nagaland

Parasitic plant found in Nagaland has no chlorophyll of its own, survives by stealing food from its host

Scientists have discovered a new species of parasitic flowering plant that has no chlorophyll, and survives by feeding on another species of plant that does (chlorophyll helps a plant make its own food using sunlight). 

 The species, named Gleadovia konyakianorum, in honour of the Konyak tribe of Nagas, was identified during an exploration earlier this year near Tobu town of Mon district in eastern Nagaland. 

“It is a holoparasite [complete parasite] that derives its entire nutritional requirement from the host plant, which is a Strobilanthes species. 

The plant was found in the semi evergreen forest at an altitude of 1,500­1,600 metres,” said Dilip Kumar Roy, a scientist with the Botanical Survey of India (BSI). 

Along with Mr. Roy, two others – N Odoyo, also from the BSI, and a Russian scientist, Leonid V. Averyanov – published the details of the new species in the journal Phytotaxa. 

Though it has no chlorophyll, the plant has a vascular system and extracts its nutrition from the host plant with the help of a haustorium, the scientists said. 


A haustorium is a specialised structure with which plant parasites attach themselves to the host plants and derive nutrition. Gleadovia konyakianorum is a root parasite that grows up to 10 cm in height, and bears white, tubular flowers. 

Interestingly, this is only the fourth species from the genus Gleadovia to be found in the world. 

The other three are Gleadovia banerjiana (discovered in Manipur), Gleadovia mupinense (found in China) and Gleadovia ruborum (discovered in Uttarakhand and also reported from China). 

The white flowering parasite was found in a group of 15­20 plants, and since the species hasn’t been reported elsewhere, scientists have described its status as ‘data deficient’ as per International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species criteria. “Parasitic plants are often referred to as curious plants, as they steal their nutritional needs from the host. 

Not only are they rare, they are crucial links in the plant kingdom that attest to Darwin’s theory of survival of the fittest,” said Rajib Gogoi, a scientist from BSI’s central national herbarium. 

Plant parasites can be stem or root parasites. Common stem parasites in India are Loranthus sp, on Mango trees, and Cuscuta reflexa, a climber. Among root parasites are Sapria himalayana, found in Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya.

0 comments:

Post a Comment