(Press-News.org) Long before flowers dazzled pollinators with brilliant colors and sweet scents, ancient plants used another feature to signal insects: heat. The findings, based on an analysis of the biology and relationship between modern cycad plants and the rare beetle species that pollinate them, offer new insights into what shaped the earliest eras of plant-animal co-evolution. Plants have evolved a remarkable array of strategies to attract pollinators, including not only color and scent, but also the production of heat. Thermogenic plants generate heat through intense cellular respiration. It’s thought that in some cases, this heat, via infrared radiation, may serve as a direct signal to pollinating insects. However, the ecological and functional role of plant thermogenesis remains speculative. Cycads, the oldest lineage of animal-pollinated seed plants, account for over half of all thermogenic species and rely on specialized beetle pollinators. Fossil evidence indicates that cycad-beetle interactions date back at least 200 million years, making them an ideal system to investigate whether the production of thermal infrared radiation functions as a sensory cue for pollinators and to explore early plant-pollinator evolution.
Wendy Valencia-Montoya and colleagues used a suite of methods, combining field observations from across the Americas with molecular biology, electrophysiology, protein structural studies, and controlled behavioral experiments, to understand cycad thermogenesis and how it relates to beetle pollinators. Valencia-Montoya et al. found that mitochondrial adaptation and circadian genes drive rhythmic heat production in the plant’s reproductive structures, causing cycads to emit a single daily burst of heat production starting in the afternoon and peaking in the early evening. This infrared radiation alone is sufficient to attract beetle pollinators. The authors also show that pollinator beetles have specialized infrared-sensing organs in their antennae, which contain extremely thermosensitive receptors whose structural variants across species align with the specific thermal output of the plants they pollinate. This suggests co-evolution between plant thermogenesis and beetle sensory systems. Evolutionary comparisons further show that infrared signaling predates the rise of widespread color-based pollination cues. “Infrared is most easily detectable at night, largely limiting cycads to pollination by night-flying beetles,” write Beverly Glover and Alex Webb in a related Perspective. “Perhaps by evolving a signal only detectable by a single receptor carried by a nocturnal insect group, the insect-pollinated cycads limited their speciation opportunities – the moon dance between cycads and beetles may have destined the cycads for limited evolutionary radiation.”
Podcast: A segment of Science's weekly podcast, related to this research, will be available on the Science.org podcast landing page after the embargo lifts. Reporters are free to make use of the segments for broadcast purposes and/or quote from them – with appropriate attribution (i.e., cite "Science podcast"). Please note that the file itself should not be posted to any other Web site.
END
Heat signaling from plants is an ancient pollinator signal
Summary author: Walter Beckwith
2025-12-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New index reveals the economics underlying the online manipulation economy
2025-12-11
Online today, the creation of fake accounts in various forms is supported by an underground market that sells text message-based verifications for these accounts. Now, researchers have developed a global index that tracks the price of these fake-account text verifications, revealing price spikes around elections and market trends that reflect national telecom costs. The findings offer policymakers a new window into how online manipulation operations take shape in real time. The internet is saturated with inauthentic activity, ranging from benign automation to networks of fake accounts promoting scams. Most platforms attempt to curb mass fake account creation through SMS-based identity verifications. ...
High-resolution satellite observations reveal facility-level methane emissions worldwide
2025-12-11
High-resolution data from the GHGSat satellite constellation reveal facility-level methane emissions at thousands of individual sites worldwide, according to a new study. The findings provide a far more detailed picture of methane emissions from the energy sector, offering new insights for global inventories and mitigation strategies. Methane is among the most powerful drivers of atmospheric warming a after carbon dioxide, and much of it comes from human activities – often from concentrated “point sources” such as individual oil, gas, and coal facilities. Methane emissions from these industries are generally estimated in two ways: bottom-up ...
Researchers discover how Ebola and Marburg disrupt the gastrointestinal tract
2025-12-11
(Boston)—Ebola (EBOV) and Marburg virus (MARV) are highly lethal viruses that cause severe disease in infected patients by extensively damaging the body. This includes the gastrointestinal tract. Severe diarrhea followed by dehydration is a major causes of death in EBOV and MARV disease patients, yet the role of the intestinal lining (epithelium) in these outcomes remain poorly understood.
A new study first-authored by Elizabeth Yvonne Flores, PhD, a recent graduate from Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, BU’s National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL) and the Center for ...
Feeling the heat
2025-12-11
Brace yourself for a hot story about plant sex.
Harvard researchers have discovered that cycads—one of the oldest living lineages of seed plants—heat up their reproductive organs to attract beetle pollinators and the insects possess infrared sensors to detect these signals. First the male cycads warm their pollen cones to entice beetles and then the female plants similarly get hot and the insects follow—and thereby spread the genetic material enabling the plants to reproduce.
The new study [LINK WILL ACTIVATE WHEN EMBARGO LIFTS 2PM THURS 12/11 ], published Thursday in a cover story in Science, marks the first time that infrared radiation has been identified as ...
Eastward earthquake rupture progression along the Main Marmara Fault towards Istanbul
2025-12-11
Summary
In April 2025, the Main Marmara Fault below the Sea of Marmara in north-western Türkiye has experienced its largest earthquake in over 60 years. In a new study now published in Science, a team of researchers led by Prof. Dr Patricia Martínez-Garzón from the GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam, Germany, analyses nearly two decades of seismic data framing the 2025 April magnitude M 6.2 earthquake. The analysis of rupture dynamics and aftershock patterns on multiple temporal scales reveals a remarkable ...
Scientists uncover how Earth’s mantle locked away vast water in early magma ocean
2025-12-11
Some 4.6 billion years ago, Earth was nothing like the gentle blue planet we know today. Frequent and violent celestial impacts churned its surface and interior into a seething ocean of magma—an environment so extreme that liquid water could not exist, leaving the entire planet resembling an inferno.
Since 70% of Earth's surface is now covered in oceans, the mystery of how water was survived and preserved in our planet from an early molten to a mostly solid state, has long been a subject of scientific study.
Recently, a team of researchers led by Prof. DU Zhixue from the Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (GIGCAS) ...
Scientists uncover key driver of treatment-resistant cancer
2025-12-11
University of California San Diego researchers have discovered the enzyme responsible for chromothripsis, a process in which a single chromosome is shattered into pieces and rearranged in a scrambled order, allowing cancer cells to rapidly evolve and become resistant to treatment. Since its discovery more than a decade ago, chromothripsis has emerged as a major driver of cancer progression and treatment resistance, but scientists haven’t learned what causes it. Now, UC San Diego scientists have solved this longstanding mystery in cancer biology, opening up new possibilities for treating ...
Rare image of Tatooine-like planet is closest to its twin stars yet
2025-12-11
In a discovery that’s fit for a movie, Northwestern University astronomers have directly imaged a Tatooine-like exoplanet, orbiting two suns.
While obtaining an image of a planet beyond our solar system is already rare, finding one that circles two suns is even rarer. But this new world is extra exceptional. It hugs its twin stars more tightly than any other directly imaged planet in a binary system. In fact, it is six times closer to its suns than other previously discovered exoplanets.
The discovery provides an unprecedented look at how planets move and form around ...
Music: Popular song lyrics have become more negative since 1973
2025-12-11
Over the past 50 years the lyrics of popular songs in the USA have become simpler, more negative, and contain more stress-related words, according to an analysis published in Scientific Reports. The authors suggest that their findings reflect the complex ways people use music to navigate stress
Maurício Martins and colleagues analysed the lyrics of the top 100 most popular English-language songs in the United States each week between 1973 and 2023 (20,186 songs), according to the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The authors found that, in general, the lyrics of popular songs have become ...
Marine ecology: Killer whales tail dolphins to hunt salmon
2025-12-11
Killer whales or orca (Orcinus orca) have been observed hunting with Pacific white-sided dolphins (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens) in the waters off British Columbia, Canada and sharing fish scraps with them after making a kill, according to research published in Scientific Reports. The authors suggest that the findings represent the first documented recording of cooperative hunting between orca and dolphins.
Pacific white-sided dolphins are often seen hunting along the coastline of British Columbia ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Further evidence of developmental risks linked to epilepsy drugs in pregnancy
Cosmetic procedures need tighter regulation to reduce harm, argue experts
How chaos theory could turn every NHS scan into its own fortress
Vaccine gaps rooted in structural forces, not just personal choices: SFU study
Safer blood clot treatment with apixaban than with rivaroxaban, according to large venous thrombosis trial
Turning herbal waste into a powerful tool for cleaning heavy metal pollution
Immune ‘peacekeepers’ teach the body which foods are safe to eat
AAN issues guidance on the use of wearable devices
In former college athletes, more concussions associated with worse brain health
Racial/ethnic disparities among people fatally shot by U.S. police vary across state lines
US gender differences in poverty rates may be associated with the varying burden of childcare
3D-printed robotic rattlesnake triggers an avoidance response in zoo animals, especially species which share their distribution with rattlers in nature
Simple ‘cocktail’ of amino acids dramatically boosts power of mRNA therapies and CRISPR gene editing
Johns Hopkins scientists engineer nanoparticles able to seek and destroy diseased immune cells
A hidden immune circuit in the uterus revealed: Findings shed light on preeclampsia and early pregnancy failure
Google Earth’ for human organs made available online
AI assistants can sway writers’ attitudes, even when they’re watching for bias
Still standing but mostly dead: Recovery of dying coral reef in Moorea stalls
3D-printed rattlesnake reveals how the rattle is a warning signal
Despite their contrasting reputations, bonobos and chimpanzees show similar levels of aggression in zoos
Unusual tumor cells may be overlooked factors in advanced breast cancer
Plants pause, play and fast forward growth depending on types of climate stress
University of Minnesota scientists reveal how deadly Marburg virus enters human cells, identify therapeutic vulnerability
Here's why seafarers have little confidence in autonomous ships
MYC amplification in metastatic prostate cancer associated with reduced tumor immunogenicity
The gut can drive age-associated memory loss
Enhancing gut-brain communication reversed cognitive decline, improved memory formation in aging mice
Mothers exposure to microbes protect their newborn babies against infection
How one flu virus can hamper the immune response to another
Researchers uncover distinct tumor “neighborhoods”, with each cell subtype playing a specific role, in aggressive childhood brain cancer
[Press-News.org] Heat signaling from plants is an ancient pollinator signalSummary author: Walter Beckwith