Credit: Eric Hill |
Here´s a second and hopefully better
attempt to review the French nature documentary "L´abominable mystère des fleurs".
Apparently, Charles Darwin regarded the origins and evolution of the flowering
plants or angiosperms an “abominable mystery” due to their seemingly rapid evolution
and diversification. The documentary tries to shed at least some light on the
problematique. One of the scientists featured is named Sarah Darwin and actually
is a descendant of Charles Robert!
If I understand the documentary correctly, 90% of all plant species are
flowering plants. They are believed to have evolved about 100 million years
ago. At the very least, the oldest known fossil of an angiosperm is that old. If
I understand it correctly, this fossil is already quite “advanced”. However, genetic
studies of Amborella – a peculiar species endemic to New Caledonia and believed
to be the last surviving member of a “basal” angiosperm lineage – suggest an
origin already 140 – 250 million years ago. This gives ample time for flowering
plants to evolve and diversify before they were preserved in the fossil record.
Later, 214 million YBP was chosen as the definitive date. Hypothetically, the
first flower was believed to have looked like a water lily! Somehow, I´m not surprised
– I always got some kind of “dinosaur” vibes from those (but maybe that´s
because of some old horror flick).
The most fascinating plant shown in the documentary is easily the
Welwitschia, which is a gymnosperm rather than an angiosperm. Only found in Namibia
and Angola, some specimens can become 2,000 years old (!). It´s also an
extremely ancient lineage. Apparently, the Welwitschia has a kind of “failed
flowers”, which has led scientists to wonder if it could be a (failed?)
transitional form between Gymnospermae and flowering plants. Genetic studies
suggest that there are similarities between how the Welwitschia forms its
pseudo-flowers and how real flowers are formed. This could be a missing link
establishing that the angiosperms are indeed descended from gymnosperms in truly
primordial times.
Other topics covered in the docu are equally interesting. Thus, most
flowers aren´t blue, which is also something of a conundrum, since insects apparently
“like” blue colors! They are easily drawn to them. It seems most flowering
plants have difficulty for various reasons related to chemistry and soil quality
to produce blue pigments. However, there are ways around this. For instance,
some non-blue flowers can produce the blue color by simply reflecting the light
that way. More surprising is the hypothesis that flowering plants can pick up
sounds! The buzzing of an insect can somehow be detected by the petals of a
flower. The producers of the documentary have humorously placed two musicians
in the middle of a poppy field, where they play Rimsky-Korsakov´s “The Flight
of the Bumblebee”!
And yes, the documentary is available in an English-language version, with
the ridiculous title “Flower Power: The Mysterious Conqueror”.
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