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Mistletoe

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Mistletoe A Special Lesson Produced by: Joan Jackson & Dr. Frank B. Flanders Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office April 2002 Teachers should view notes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mistletoe


1
Mistletoe
  • A Special Lesson
  • Produced by Joan Jackson Dr. Frank B. Flanders
  • Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office
  • April 2002
  • Teachers should view notes pages for additional
    information on certain slides.
  • View note pages by clicking on View and then
    Notes Page

Click HERE for more information about the authors.
2
Introduction to Mistletoe
  • Mistletoe is one of our best-known, but least
    understood plants. Although, familiar to
    everyone at Christmas, with a history in folklore
    and legend, little is known about this strange
    plant other than kissing under the mistletoe as a
    Christmas tradition.

3
Mistletoe is a Vampire
  • It survives by sucking nutrients from the host
    tree, sometimes killing the tree although
    mistletoe has a vested interest in keeping the
    tree alive. For this reason, mistletoe is
    sometimes known as the vampire plant.

4
Mistletoe is a Freeloader
  • It is parasitic on the stems of woody plants,
    from which it derives water, mineral nutrients,
    and organic compounds carried in xylem sap.

5
Mistletoe is a Thief
  • Its scientific name, Phoradendron, means
    thief of the tree in Greek. The mistletoe
    plant puts its roots down into tree limbs in
    order to steal water and nutrients.
  • Mistletoe is semi parasitic that is, it has
    green leaves that provide some energy meets many
    of its energy by sucking the life blood from its
    host, usually oaks, elms, and poplars.

6
What is Mistletoe?
  • The well-known Mistletoe is an evergreen
    parasitic plant, growing on the branches of
    trees, where it forms pendent bushes, 2 to 5 feet
    in diameter.

7
What is Mistletoe cont.
  • Evergreen clumps of mistletoe are readily
    observed on deciduous trees in winter when leaves
    are off the trees.

8
What is Mistletoe cont.
  • Mistletoe is especially interesting botanically
    because it is a partial parasite (a hemi
    parasite). As a parasitic plant, it grows on
    the branches or trunk of a tree and
  • actually sends out roots that penetrate into the
    tree to take up nutrients. But mistletoe is also
    capable of producing its own nutrients by
    photosynthesis.

9
What is Mistletoe cont.
  • American mistletoe (Phoradendron species) can
    be found growing in deciduous trees from New
    Jersey and southern Indiana southward to Florida
    and Texas. It is also the state flower of
    Oklahoma.

10
What is Mistletoe cont.
  • Most of the mistletoe sold during the holiday
    season is gathered in the wild. Most mistletoe
    is harvested in Oklahoma and Texas.

11
How did Mistletoe get its Name?
  • The common name of mistletoe is derived from
    the ancient belief that mistletoe was propagated
    from bird droppings. This belief was related to
    the then-accepted principle that life could
    spring spontaneously from dung.

12
How did Mistletoe get its Name? cont.
  • It was observed in ancient times that mistletoe
    would often appear on a branch or twig where
    birds had left droppings. Mistel is the
    Anglo-Saxon word for dung, and toe is the
    word for twig. So, mistletoe means
    dung-on-a-twig.

13
The Sex of Mistletoe
  • Mistletoe plants are either male (produce only
    pollen) or female (produce berries).

14
The Sex of Mistletoe cont.
  • All species of mistletoe in the United States
    are dioecious meaning they have male and female
    flowers on separate plants. Male plants produce
    only pollen, and female plants produce flowers
    and fleshy, white seed pods. Each pod is filled
    with a slimy and sticky clear fluid and one seed
    covered with a tough greenish membrane (see
    photos below).

15
Why is mistletoe green if it is parasitic?
  • Technically speaking, mistletoe is a
    semi-parasite, although it steals water and
    nutrients from a host plant. It has green leaves
    from chloroplasts used in photosynthesis.
  •   Mistletoe plants develop well in full sunlight
    and reach most extensive development high in the
    crowns of large trees where it can obtain the
    light needed for photosynthesis.

16
Legends and Traditions
  • The traditions, which began with the European
    mistletoe in ancient times, were transferred to
    the similar American plant with the process of
    immigration and settlement.

17
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • In the Middle Ages and later, branches of
    mistletoe were hung from ceilings to ward off
    evil spirits. In Europe they were placed over
    house and stable doors to prevent the entrance of
    witches.

18
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • In Scandinavia, mistletoe was considered a
    plant of peace, under which enemies could declare
    a truce or disagreeing spouses could kiss and
    make-up.

19
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • In some parts of England the Christmas
    mistletoe is burned on the twelfth night lest all
    the boys and girls who have kissed under it never
    marry.

20
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • Kissing under the mistletoe is first found
    associated with the Greek festival of Saturnalia
    and later with primitive marriage rites.
    Mistletoe was believed to have the
  • power of bestowing fertility, and the dung from
    which the mistletoe was thought to arise was also
    said to have life-giving power.

21
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • And for those who wish to observe the correct
    etiquette a man should pluck a berry when he
    kisses a woman under the mistletoe, and when the
    last berry is gone, there should be no more
    kissing!

22
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • In the first century, the Druids in Britain
    believed that mistletoe could perform miracles,
    which ranged from providing fertility to humans
    and animals to healing diseases and protecting
    people from witchcraft.

23
Legends and Traditions cont.
  • The Druids believed mistletoe could influence
    human fertility and was prescribed to individuals
    who had problems bearing children. Mistletoe has
    also been used in medicine as treatment of
    pleurisy, gout, epilepsy, rabies, and poisoning.

24
Traditions of Mistletoe cont.
  • Plastic mistletoe has become a fairly common
    substitute in recent years because real mistletoe
    has poisonous berries.  It's all part of the fun
    of Christmas, but some consider it a shame to
    devalue traditions by using fake material.

25
Traditions of Mistletoe cont.
  • Because of its association with pagan
    ceremonies, mistletoe was banned from Christmas
    ceremonies by the Church in Medieval times.

26
Traditions of Mistletoe cont.
  • A common medieval belief held that mistletoe
    was the wood used to make the crucifix. Cursed,
    mistletoe was no longer welcome on earth and was
    doomed to live as a parasite growing on trees. It
    was not until the 17th century that people became
    more open about their fondness for mistletoe.

27
What Genus/Species is Mistletoe?
  • The mistletoe that is commonly used as a
    Christmas decoration, genus Phoradendron
    flavescens, is native to North America.

28
What Genus/Species is Mistletoe? cont.
  • Phoradendron (American mistletoes)
  • There are some 1500 species of mistletoes
    worldwide.
  • Phoradendron is a large genus (perhaps 170
    species) of primarily tropical and subtropical
    evergreen plants restricted to the Americas.
    Twelve species occur in the United States.

29
Seed Dispersal
  • The small, sticky, whitish berries are
    produced from October to December. American
    mistletoes are most often distributed by birds.
    Birds avoid the immature fruits which are bitter,
    hard and contain poisonous compounds.

Instead, they eat mature fruits, however, they
are still hard to digest.
30
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • The birds ingest the fruit and digest the pulp,
    but the seeds quickly pass through the intestinal
    tract, retaining a sticky covering of hair-like
    threads that serve as glue to adhere them to the
    surface on which the remaining seeds fall.

31
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • Another way birds spread seeds is when the
    birds clean their bills by rubbing them against
    the branches or bark of trees because the sticky
    seeds of mistletoe tend to cling to the bills of
    birds.

32
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • In most cases, the initial infestation occurs
    of mistletoe on larger or older trees because
    birds prefer to perch in the tops of tall trees.

33
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • While broadleaf mistletoe seeds are dispersed
    by birds, dwarf mistletoe seeds are spread mostly
    by their random forcible discharge from fruit,
    which can propel seeds horizontally into trees up
    to 30 to 40 feet away.

34
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • Seeds are capable of germinating anywhere if
    temperature and moisture are suitable, but only
    seeds that lodge on thin bark of twigs and small
    branches of a suitable host will cause infection.

35
Seed Dispersal cont.
  • A heavy buildup of mistletoe often occurs
    within an infested tree because birds are
    attracted to the berries, and may spend a
    significant amount of time feeding on them and
    depositing their droppings.

In addition, seeds may fall from mistletoe plants
in the upper part of the tree, creating new
infestations on the lower branches.
36
Germination
  • Seeds are rapidly defecated by birds while they
    still have their slimy, sticky coating. This
    allows the seeds to cling to a branch, sprout and
    insert its root-like "haustoria" into the
    water-conducting system of the tree.

37
Germination cont.
  • Upon germination, the radical flattens itself
    against the bark, forming an attachment disc or
    holdfast. A multicellular projection called the

primary haustorium grows from the undersurface of
the holdfast and penetrates the bark, often
through lenticels or auxiliary buds.
38
Germination cont.
  • It takes many years for mistletoe to grow large
    enough to produce flowers and seeds. The
    haustoria in mistletoe both penetrates the
    water-conducting tissue of the trees (water
    transport) and infiltrate in between the cells
    where they absorb most nutrients.

39
Germination cont.
  • Once beneath the periderm in living cortical
    tissue or secondary phloem, the primary
    haustorium produces a radiating system of
    branches termed cortical strands or cortical
    haustoria. Wedge-shaped projections called
    sinkers grow from the cortical strands and pass
    through the cambium to the outer surface of the
    lignified xylem.

40
Germination cont.
  • Certain cells within the sinker differentiate
    into water-conducting tracheids and vessels.
    Some of these come into intimate contact with
    vessels or tracheids of the host such that open
    pits and perforations connect the
    water-conducting systems of the two plants. This
    assures transport of water and minerals to the
    parasite.

41
Germination cont.
  • Activity of this meristem is synchronized with
    that of the host so that the sinker elongates as
    the host stem increases in radius. Aerial shoots
    begin to grow after the

system of cortical stands and sinkers is
initiated. The first shoots arise from buds on
the holdfast, and they grow only a few
millimeters during the first year.
42
Is Mistletoe Poisonous?
  • Some mistletoes are poisonous to humans,
    especially some of the true or leafy mistletoes
    of hardwood trees, but it typically takes
    ingestion of numerous leaves or shoots of a
    mistletoe plant to affect an adult. Children and
    pets on the other hand, are much smaller and are
    affected by much less of a plant.

43
Is Mistletoe Poisonous? cont.
  • Although mistletoe has been used in the
    treatment of several ailments, the berries are
    poisonous. Individuals using mistletoe during the
    holiday season should keep the sprigs out of the
    reach of
  • children. For safety reasons, many companies have
    replaced the berries with artificial, plastic
    berries.

44
How does Mistletoe invade a tree?
  • After arriving on a host, a typical mistletoe
    seed's first exploratory root grows away from
    light, and into the crevices of the bark of a
    limb or tree trunk.

Once inside the bark, the mistletoe sends in
special wedge tissue in search of the plumbing.
45
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • Hitting the host's network of water-carrying
    cells deep inside the plant, the mistletoe builds
    its own system of ducts to steal water and
    nutrients. After the mistletoe seed germinates,
    it grows through the bark and into the tree's
    water-conducting tissues, where root-like
    structures called haustoria develop.

46
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • The haustoria gradually extends up and down
    within the branch as the mistletoe grows.
    Initially, the parasitic plant grows slowly

it may take years before the plant blooms and
produces seeds. Broadleaf mistletoes have
succulent stems that become woody at the base.
47
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • Initial infection usually occurs on a small
    branch and is followed by multiple infections on
    the same tree after the initial plant produces
    fruit.
  • The dominant symptom caused by mistletoe is
    atrophy (meaning wither) and dieback of branch
    ends beyond the point of attachment of the
    parasite.

48
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • Mistletoe may increase dramatically within a
    single tree where birds roost, feed on berries,
    and deposit seeds on twigs and branches.
    Multiple infections result in loss of vigor,
    dieback, and often death (to the tree).

49
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • Bark tissues of host and parasite meet in a
    convoluted line at the swollen union. Dissection
    shows continuity of xylem of host and parasite.

50
How does Mistletoe invade a tree? cont.
  • Mistletoe has developed a very specialized
    tissue with the shape of a bell (called a
    haustorium). This bell-shaped structure grows
    into the host tree and combines with the living
    tree.

51
Does Mistletoe hurt trees? cont.
  • Broadleaf mistletoe absorbs both water and
    mineral nutrients from its host trees. Healthy
    trees can tolerate a few mistletoe branch
    infections, but individual branches may be
    weakened or sometimes
  • killed. Heavily infested trees may be reduced in
    vigor, stunted, or even killed, especially if
    they are stressed by other problems such as
    drought or disease.

52
Does Mistletoe hurt trees? cont.
  • People passing through a forest may dismiss
    mistletoes as relatively harmless since these
    parasites do not seem to do much damage. But over
    the trees life span, damage can be significant,
    but not noticed by humans for years to come.

53
Does Mistletoe hurt trees? cont.
  • Economic damage by Phoradendron species of
    mistletoe is considered to be slight, although
    other species of mistletoe cause much more sever
    damage. The damage caused by mistletoe in Georgia
    is best described as tree decline.

54
How does Mistletoe damage trees?
  • Mistletoe tissues are capable of maintaining
    greater osmotic potential than tissues of the
    host thus the parasite preferentially receives
    water during times of water shortage. In simpler
    terms,
  • mistletoe really sucks its pull of water
    through the trees xylem is stronger than that of
    the tree and it will obtain water when the tree
    is thirsting to death.

55
How does Mistletoe damage trees? cont.
  • Mistletoes also waste water by continuing to
    transpire even when under water stress. This
    causes abnormally
  • severe water stress in hosts and is considered to
    contribute to dieback and loss of vigor.

56
How does Mistletoe damage trees? cont.
  • Mistletoes are also stingy with the nutrients
    produced in their leaves. The nutrients are
    translocated from mistletoe leaves and stems to
    the invading stem tissues at the point of
    connection with the hose but the nutrients are
    not passed to the host.

57
How long does Mistletoe live?
  • The longevity of the entophytic system seems
    limited only by that of the host and may extend
    to hundreds of years.

58
Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe
  • Cherokee tribes used a "Tea ooze" to bathe the
    head for a headache, an infusion of the plant for
    high blood pressure, and lung problems, the
    dried, powdered plant, particular from the oak,
    for epilepsy, and to cure "love sickness", an
    infusion was taken after four days of vomiting.

59
Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe cont.
  • Houma tribes used the decoction of the plant
    for debility and paralytic weakness, and as a
    general panacea. Modern medical research has
    shown that mistletoe has promise for treating
    some cancers, hypertension, vertigo, epilepsy,
    palsy and cardiovascular ailments.

60
Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe cont.
  • Various extracts from mistletoe are being
    investigated for treating cancer in humans,
    including ovarian cancer, lymphoma, and others.
    However, our mistletoe is very poisonous and
    should not be eaten or even nibbled.

61
Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe cont.
  • Research has also confirmed that it is, in
    fact, very poisonous, so alternatives were
    developed and mistletoe was not the miracle drug
    as some had believed. Traces of its use have even
    been found among Native Americans.

62
Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe cont.
  • Now the healing properties of mistletoe are
    being utilized in the fight against cancer with
    some interesting research and clinical trials
    showing that extracts of the

plant seem to have an inhibiting effect on tumor
growth, and increase the plasma B-endorphin
levels which directly affect pain and mood levels
in patients undergoing chemo and radiation
therapy.
63
How to Control Mistletoe
  • The most effective way to control mistletoe and
    prevent its spread is to prune out infected
    branches as soon as the parasite appears. Remove
    infected branches at their point of origin or
    back to large lateral branches.

64
How to Control Mistletoe cont.
  • Infected branches need to be cut at least one
    foot below the point of mistletoe attachment in
    order to completely remove embedded haustoria.

65
How to Control Mistletoe cont.
  • Mistletoes infecting a major branch or the
    trunk where it cannot be pruned may be controlled
    by cutting off the mistletoe flush with the limb
    or trunk. Then wrap the area with a few layers of
    wide, black polyethylene to exclude light.
    Mistletoe requires light and will die within a
    couple of years without it.

66
How to Control Mistletoe cont.
  • Some tree species appear resistant to broadleaf
    mistletoe. Bradford pear, crape myrtle, ginkgo,
    golden rain tree, sweet gum and sycamore are
    rarely infested.

67
How to Control Mistletoe cont.
  • Some people say that mistletoe should not be
    controlled. Clearly, mistletoes are part of the
    rich biodiversity and they play an extremely
    important role in the food supply of several
    native birds and insects. In any case Mistletoe
    causes very little damage.

68
The End
  • All in all, when you bump into someone under a
    suspended sprig, there's a lot more to say than
    "Kiss me, you fool."

69
Terms Associated with Mistletoe
  • Haustorium. The morphologically modified root
    which physically connects the parasite to the
    host. May be a primary haustorium if the radicle
    apex is directly transformed into a haustorium
    (e.g. Striga asiatica) or a secondary haustorium
    formed from tissues other than the radicle apex
    such as secondary root apices or from lateral
    positions on the root (e.g. Ximenia, Dasistoma).
    The haustoria of holoparasites are more complex
    (see Conopholis, Balanophora ).

70
Terms Associated with Mistletoe cont.
  • Holdfast. In some mistletoes, a disc-like
    swelling at the end of the radicle that effects
    the first attachment to the host. In this example
    of an autoparasitic Macrosolen seedling, the
    holdfast is present and a young epicortical root
    is emerging from it.
  • Host. A plant that provides nutrition to an
    attached parasitic plant.

71
Terms Associated with Mistletoe cont.
  • Host-specific. A relationship whereby a parasitic
    plant successfully attaches to a limited number
    of host species.
  • Mistletoe. A general term for a parasitic plant
    that occurs on the branches of a woody host
    plant. Mistletoes occur in several taxonomically
    distinct families such as Viscaceae,
    Loranthaceae, Misodendraceae, and Santalaceae
    (incl. Eremolepidaceae).

72
Terms Associated with Mistletoe cont.
  • Parasite. A symbiotic association whereby an
    organism obtains at least some of its nutrition
    directly from another organism. In plants, a
    restrictive definition includes only parasites
    with haustorial connections to other plants, not
    mycotrophs. See also hemiparasite, holoparasite,
    facultative parasite and obligate parasite.

73
Terms Associated with Mistletoe cont.
  • Resistance. A feature or features of a plant that
    prevent it from serving as a host to a parasitic
    plant. This resistance may be manifested prior to
    or after initial haustorial attachment.
  • Sinker. See endophyte.
  • Susceptible. A feature or features of a plant
    that allow it to serve as a host to a parasitic
    plant.

74
Would you like to play a game?
YES- I would like to play How would you like to
be a Mistletoe Millionaire (Game 15)
YES- I would like to view the questions in
Microsoft Word.
NO- I would like to end now.
75
Joan Jackson is a Freshman at the University of
Georgia. She is majoring in Agricultural
Communications.
Dr. Frank Flanders is the Curriculum Coordinator
for Georgia Agriculture Education. He and his
staff produce the Georgia Agricultural Education
Curriculum Resource and Reference CD annually.
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