Brace yourself for a hot story about plant sex.

Harvard researchers have discovered that cycads — an ancient lineage of seed plants — heat their reproductive organs to attract beetle pollinators, which in turn evolved specialized infrared sensors. First male cycads warm their pollen cones to entice beetles, and then the female plants heat up, drawing the insects over and thereby transferring the genetic material to fertilize the seeds.

The new study, published Thursday in a cover story in Science, shows that infrared radiation is a pollination signal, one far older than the vivid colors that later became dominant among flowering plants.

“This is basically adding a new dimension of information that plants and animals are using …

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