Chillies - why have they evolved to be spicy ?

Chillies - why have they evolved to be spicy ?

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Discussion

0836whimper

Original Poster:

975 posts

210 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?



zaktoo

805 posts

219 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
I understand that cats can't taste spicy. I guess some animals like them & so propagate the seeds...

Donut

4,521 posts

263 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
Hang on, I'll ask the cat!

_daveR

6,146 posts

239 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Donut said:
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
Hang on, I'll ask the cat!
I'll stick a diced sctoch bonnet in with the cats food tonight and report back smile

Einion Yrth

19,575 posts

256 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
For ecology graduate student Joshua Tewksbury of the University of Montana in Missoula, the hot pain of biting into a chili pepper is one of life's great pleasures. He's also come to think of it as a lesson in evolutionary manipulation. Chilli plants pump their fruits full of capsaicin, a chemical that stimulates pain-sensing neurons in the mouth.

After field studies in southern Arizona, Tewksbury may have discovered why the plants go to such great lengths. Mammals such as cactus mice and desert pack rats find capsaicin unpalatable--a good thing for the plant, because the animals' digestive systems would destroy the seeds within the chilies. Birds can't taste the chemical, however, so they freely eat the chilies. Chili seeds eaten and then expelled by birds are three times more likely to germinate than those that fall off the plant naturally. In lab tests, Tewksbury found that rodents greedily eat specially bred, capsaicin-free peppers. "Chilies clearly benefit from knocking mammals out of the picture," he says.

Zod

35,295 posts

270 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
zaktoo said:
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
I understand that cats can't taste spicy. I guess some animals like them & so propagate the seeds...
Having been an evil child, I can confirm that dogs are sensitive to spice. hehe

Liokault

2,837 posts

226 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Also Supprisingly, seagulls don't like chillies.


Donut

4,521 posts

263 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
_daveR said:
Donut said:
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
Hang on, I'll ask the cat!
I'll stick a diced sctoch bonnet in with the cats food tonight and report back smile
Right then,

For all of you who speak cat it said.......

Mieoooooooooow

I'm not Dr feckin dolitle!!

Silverbullet767

10,959 posts

218 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Donut said:
_daveR said:
Donut said:
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
Hang on, I'll ask the cat!
I'll stick a diced sctoch bonnet in with the cats food tonight and report back smile
Right then,

For all of you who speak cat it said.......

Mieoooooooooow

I'm not Dr feckin dolitle!!
Did it run around the room banging its head off of the furniture??

Martin_Bpool

299 posts

218 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Zod said:
zaktoo said:
0836whimper said:
What is the genetic advantage in being spicy flavoured and do all animals find them equally spicy ?
I understand that cats can't taste spicy. I guess some animals like them & so propagate the seeds...
Having been an evil child, I can confirm that dogs are sensitive to spice. hehe
Our Dog loves Dominos Jalapeno peppers

Semi hemi

1,801 posts

210 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Mammals whos teeth would damage the seeds are discoraged from eating the peppers by the the heat unlike most birds who will allow their crop to breakdown and seperate the seeds from the pulp

Davi

17,153 posts

232 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Chilli's are poisonous (of a sort), it's the poison that gives them the "spicy" flavour - they just aren't very good at being poisonous so fail to stop us eating them.

pdV6

16,442 posts

273 months

Friday 15th February 2008
quotequote all
Liokault said:
Also Supprisingly, seagulls don't like chillies.
They prefer the pitta and a bit of soggy donner meat.