D. BALASUBRAMANIAN
( The Hindu, Speaking of Science, April, 18, 2013)
Caffeine in nectar hooks bees.
How did coffee become more popular in south India and tea in the north?
History appears to give the reason. Legend has it that in the late 16th
century while Haji Baba Budan was returning from Haj through Yemen, he
found people boiling coffee beans in water and enjoying the “decoction”.
He then smuggled a handful of the (forbidden to export) beans with him
and planted them on the Chikamagalur hills in Karnataka and the locals
took to it with elan. Soon, coffee plantations appeared in Kodagu and
the Nilgiris, and we all were hooked on to the morning coffee.
Tea, on
the other hand, was introduced later (early 19 century) by the colonial
British who copied it from the Chinese and planted it in Assam and
Darjeeling. This colonial drink soon became popular among the subjects
in the plains as well. Coffee and tea are thus external entrants into
the Indian taste buds.
But why are we hooked on to coffee and tea?
The answer comes from
science, which tells us that they both contain the mood- altering and
addictive drug caffeine. While this is a proximal answer, the ultimate
question is why at all do these plants go to the trouble of making the
molecule in the first place. After all, it takes metabolic energy to do
so. The answer appears to be “to deter herbivores”, or as a defence
chemical. Note that the raw bean or leaf is bitter to taste, and the
animal would shy away, leaving the plant alone to grow and flourish.
Recent findings add another dimension to the tale. It has been found the
caffeine is found not only in the bean or the leaves but also in the
nectar that the plant produces and packs a drop or two in its flowers.
And why it would do so and what this stored caffeine does in the flower
nectar has been investigated by a group of researchers from U.K. and
published in the March 8, 2013 issue of Science.
They note that while plant-derived drugs like caffeine and nicotine (the
drug in the tobacco plant) are lethal in high doses, they do generate
pleasant effects when taken in very low doses. But then why in the
floral nectar? Is it in order to “hook on” bees and other pollinating
insects? To understand this, the researchers first measured the levels
of caffeine in the nectar of three plants, Coffee arabica, C. liberica and C. canephora,
to which bees make a bee-line for (pardon the pun), and found the
amounts to be less than a thousand-fold that of the sugar present in the
bean — just a teasing touch.
They hypothesised that the caffeine in the nectar could affect the
learning and memory of the foraging pollinators. Could it be that they
would come to these flowers, enjoy the nectar and in the process take
away and dispense the pollen, thus breeding these plants in preference
to those that do not store caffeine in their nectar? In order to test
this, the researchers took the trouble of training individual bees to
associate a floral scent with sugar reward. In one set the bees would go
to the containers with sugar solution, and in another set the sugar
solution spiked with a bit of caffeine. And they found that the bees
would consistently return to the caffeine sugar scent even three days
later. In other words, caffeine acted as a memory enhancer. The bees
were hooked onto caffeine.
The researchers went further ahead and investigated the biological
mechanisms behind the mode of action of the caffeine. The bee brain
contains what are called projection neurons or nerve cells that have a
protein surface (a receptor) that normally binds to the molecule
adenosine. When these nerve cells are adenosine-bound, the behaviour of
the bee is one of quiet and calm. However when caffeine is brought in,
it kicks out the adenosine and attaches itself to the receptors at the
end of the sensory neurons. The effect is to stimulate the neurons,
increase memory, and wake up and excite the insect.
In effect then, caffeine has two roles in the plant. One is defence
against the predator goats and cows, while the other is to entice the
pollinating insect by drugging it and tweaking its memory so that it
pollinates this plant in preference to other pants that do not pack the
drug in their nectar. The researchers conclude by stating that “our
experiments suggest that by affecting a pollinator’s memory, plants reap
the reproductive benefits arising from enhanced pollinator fidelity”.
In plainer English, one can say that the trick the coffee plants play is
another example of the ‘selfish gene’ idea, namely, use any ruse to
help propagate my genes over other competitors, and do so for
generations; and if it takes caffeine to entice and tweak the memory of
the pollinator, so be it.
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