This is known as
entomophily. There are many different subtypes.
Bee pollination (melittophily) There are diverse types of bees (such as
honeybees,
bumblebees, and
orchid bees), forming large groups that are quite distinctive in size,
tongue length and behaviour (some solitary, some colonial); thus generalization about bee pollination is difficult. Some plants can only be pollinated by bees because their
anthers release pollen internally, and it must be shaken out by
buzz pollination (also known as "sonication"). Bees are the only animals that perform this behaviour. Bumblebees and
solitary bees sonicate, but honeybees do not. About 9% of the flowers of the world are primarily pollinated using buzz pollination.
Wasp pollination Wasps are also responsible for the pollination of several plants species, being important
pollen vectors, and in some cases, even more efficient pollinators than bees.
Butterfly pollination (psychophily) Despite their complete dependence on flowers for sustenance as
imagoes, butterflies are generally poor pollinators, lacking specific structures to carry pollen. Nonetheless, some plants appear to have specialised on attracting butterflies.
Buddleja is a well-known example. The species in the orchid genus
Bonatea are all pollinated by moths, except for
Bonatea cassidea which has evolved into a psychophile. This orchid affixes its
pollinaria firmly between the
palpi of visiting butterflies. Unlike its relatives, this orchid species exhibits diurnal
anthesis, a weak scent which is virtually absent at night, and has short spurs containing small amounts of relatively dilute sucrose-rich nectar -these are all considered psychophilous traits.
B. cassidea has white flowers, but butterfly-attracting flowers are often coloured. Unlike bees and wasps, some butterflies such as
swallowtails are able to see the colour red. Butterflies also require a platform on which to land.
Fly pollination (myophily and sapromyophily) Flies tend to be important pollinators in high-
altitude and high-
latitude systems, where they are numerous and other insect groups may be lacking. There are two main types of fly pollination:
myophily and
sapromyophily. Myophily includes flies that feed on nectar and pollen as adults - particularly
bee flies (Bombyliidae),
hoverflies (Syrphidae), and others - and these regularly visit flowers. In contrast, male
fruit flies (Tephritidae) are enticed by specific floral attractants emitted by some wild orchids which do not produce nectar. Chemicals emitted by the orchid act as the fly's sex pheromone precursor or booster. Sapromyophiles, on the other hand, normally visit dead animals or
dung. They are attracted to flowers which mimic the odor of such objects. The plant provides them with no reward and they leave quickly unless it has
traps to slow them down. Such plants are far less common than myophilous ones.
Beetle pollination (cantharophily) Beetles are particularly important in some parts of the world such as semi-arid areas of
Southern Africa and
southern California Cantharophily is often the main pollination system in the
Araceae family. It occurs in genera such as
Amorphophallus,
Dieffenbachia,
Monstera,
Philodendron and
Theriophonum. A well-known example is the gigantic inflorescence of
Amorphophallus titanum. This bloom appears like column sticking out of a vast sheet of rotting flesh. It is able to
generate heat, which it uses to exude a powerful foetid and revolting odour at night. This attracts
necrophagous beetles, and also specialised beetle predators of these beetles -the plant is essentially tricking the beetles into believing that there is food or a place to lay their eggs. Araceae flowers often trap beetles in a compartment with the pollen: the beetles must pass through a constriction of the spathe to get inside, but the plant can tighten the
spathe against the
spadix and thus close the constriction for a time. There is also some evidence that the giant inflorescence, which heats itself to , thus shines like an invisible
infrared beacon in the dark of night on the jungle floor, unseen by humans but detectable by insects. The blooms of
Philodendron adamantinum are able to stick a glob of resin on the otherwise smooth back of the beetles it attracts, modifying them so they are better equipped to carry pollen to the next inflorescence. == Lizard pollination ==