Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T05:09:11.942Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Habitat, CO2 uptake and growth for the CAM epiphytic cactus Epiphyllum phyllanthus in a Panamanian tropical forest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Jose Luis Andrade
Affiliation:
Department of Biology and UCLA-DOE Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1606, USA
Park S. Nobel
Affiliation:
Department of Biology and UCLA-DOE Laboratory, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1606, USA

Abstract

In the tropical forest of Barro Colorado Island, habitat characteristics, diel acidity changes, CO2 uptake and growth were investigated for the epiphytic cactus Epiphyllum phyllanthus (L.) Haw. It occurred most frequently in tree cavities with its roots in canopy soil and was especially abundant on two tree species: Platypodium elegans J. Vogel and Tabebuia guayacan (Seem.) Hemsl. Its maximum net CO2 uptake rates were low under natural conditions (1.4 μmol m−1) but were comparable to those of other CAM and C3 epiphytes under wet conditions in a screenhouse. Under both natural conditions and in the screenhouse, partial shade enhanced growth and CAM activity. When plants grew under a photosynthetic photon flux of c. 4 mol m−2 d−1, their nocturnal acidity increase and total net CO2 uptake were twice as much as for plants growing at lower (an average of 2.4 mol m−2 d−1) and higher (7.7 mol m−2 d−1) photosynthetic photon fluxes. Stem elongation was 27% greater at the intermediate photosynthetic photon flux. Seedlings of E. phyllanthus survived three months of drought and responded rapidly to rewetting, recovering fully within three days. Transpiration rates and nocturnal acidity increases also recovered to the values of well-watered plants a few days after rewetting, indicating that this species can take advantage of episodic rainfall during the dry season.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

IIIAdams, W. W. & Osmond, C. B. 1988. Internal CO2 supply during photosynthesis of sun and shade grown CAM plants in relation to photoinhibition. Plant Physiology 86:117123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benzing, D. H. 1983. Vascular epiphytes: a survey with special reference to their interactions with other organisms. Pp. 1124 in Sutton, S. L., Whitmore, T. C. & Chadwick, A. C. (eds). Tropical rainforest: ecology and management. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford. 498 pp.Google Scholar
Benzing, D. H. 1990. Vascular epiphytes. General biology and related biota. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 354 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bravo-Hollis, H. 1978. Las cactáceas de México. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México. 743 pp.Google Scholar
Croat, T. B. 1978. Flora of Barro Colorado Island. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California. 943 pp.Google Scholar
Davidson, D. W. 1988. Ecological studies of neotropical ant gardens. Ecology 69:11381152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, A. C. & Nobel, P. S. 1986. The cactus primer. Harvard University Press, Cambridge. 286 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffiths, H. 1988. Carbon balance during CAM: an assessment of respiratory CO2 recycling in the epiphytic bromeliads Aechmea nudicaulis and Aechmea fendleri. Plant, Cell and Environment 11:603611.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffiths, H., Lüttge, U., Stimmel, K.-H., Crook, C. E., Griffiths, N. M. & Smith, J. A. C. 1986. Comparative ecophysiology of CAM and C3 bromeliads. III. Environmental influences on CO2 assimilation and transpiration. Plant, Cell and Environment 9:385393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hubbell, S. P. & Foster, R. B. 1983. Diversity of canopy trees in a neotropical forest and implications for conservation. Pp. 2541 in Sutton, S. L., Whitmore, T. C. & Chadwick, A. C. (eds). Tropical rainforest: ecology and management. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford. 498 pp.Google Scholar
Johansson, D. 1974. Ecology of vascular epiphytes in West African rain forest. Acta Phytogeographica Suecica 59:1129.Google Scholar
Jordan, P. W. & Nobel, P. S. 1981. Seedling establishment of Ferocactus acanthodes in relation to growth. Ecology 62:901906.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kress, W. J. 1986. The systematic distribution of vascular epiphytes: an update. Selbyana 9:222.Google Scholar
Leigh, E. G. Jr & Wright, S. J. 1990. Barro Colorado Island and tropical biology. Pp. 2847 in Gentry, A. H. (ed.). Four neotropical rainforests. Yale University Press, New Haven. 627 pp.Google Scholar
Lesica, P. & Antibus, R. K. 1990. The occurrence of mycorrhizae in vascular epiphytes of two Costa Rican rain forests. Biotropica 22:250258.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loeshen, V. S., Martin, C. E., Smith, M. & Eder, S. L. 1993. Leaf anatomy and CO2 recycling during Crassulacean acid metabolism in twelve epiphytic species of Tillandsia (Bromeliaceae). International Journal of Plant Sciences 154:100106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lüttge, U. 1989. Vascular plants as epiphytes. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 270 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Medina, E., Olivares, E. & Diaz, M. 1986. Water stress and light intensity effects on growth and nocturnal acid accumulation in a terrestrial CAM bromeliad (Bromelia humilis Jacq.) under natural conditions. Oecologia 70:441446.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Medina, E., Olivares, E., Diaz, M. & Van Der Merwe, N. 1989. Metabolismo ácido de crassuláceas en bosques húmedos tropicales. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden 27:5667.Google Scholar
Nobel, P. S. 1988. Environmental biology of agaves and cacti. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 270 pp.Google Scholar
Nobel, P. S. & Hartsock, T. L. 1983. Relationships between photosynthetically active radiation, nocturnal acid accumulation, and CO2 uptake for a Crassulacean acid metabolism plant, Opuntia ficus-indica. Plant Physiology 71:7175.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nobel, P. S. & Hartsock, T. L. 1986. Leaf and stem CO2 uptake in the three subfamilies of the Cactaceae. Plant Physiology 80:913917.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nobel, P. S. & Hartsock, T. L. 1990. Diel patterns of CO2 exchange for epiphytic cacti differing in succulence. Physiologia Plantarum 78:628634.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
North, G. B. & Nobel, P. S. 1992. Drought-induced changes in hydraulic conductivity and structure in roots of Ferocactus acanthodes and Opuntia ficus-indica. New Phytologist 120:919.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
North, G. B. & Nobel, P. S. 1994. Changes in root hydraulic conductivity for two tropical epiphytic cacti as soil moisture varies. American Journal of Botany 81:4653.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osmond, C. B., Winter, K. & Powles, S. B. 1980. Adaptive significance of carbon dioxide cycling during photosynthesis in water-stressed plants. Pp. 139154 in Turner, N. C. & Kramer, P. J. (eds). Adaptation of plants to water and high temperature stress. John Wiley & Sons, New York. 482 pp.Google Scholar
Putz, F. E. & Holbrook, N. M. 1986. Notes on the natural history of hemiepiphytes. Selbyana 9:6169.Google Scholar
Putz, F. E. & Holbrook, N. M. 1989. Strangler fig rooting habits and nutrient relations in the llanos of Venezuela. American Journal of Botany 76:781788.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheaffer, R. L., Mendenhall, W. & Ott, L. 1986. Elementary survey sampling. PWS Publishers, Boston. 390 pp.Google Scholar
Sinclair, R. 1983. Water relations of tropical epiphytes. II. Performance during droughting. Journal of Experimental Botany 34:16641675.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, J. A. C., Griffiths, H. & Lüttge, U. 1986. Comparative ecophysiology of CAM and C3 bromeliads. I. The ecology of the Bromeliaceae in Trinidad. Plant, Cell and Environment 9:359376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Windsor, D. M. 1990. Climate and moisture variability in a tropical forest: long-term records from Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Smithsonian Contributions to the Earth Sciences, Number 29. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.145 pp.Google Scholar
Winter, K., Osmond, C. B. & Hubick, K. T. 1986. Crassulacean acid metabolism in the shade. Studies on an epiphytic fern, Pyrrosia longifolia, and other rainforest species from Australia. Oecologia 68:224230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, K., Wallace, B. J., Stocker, G. C. & Roksandic, Z. 1983. Crassulacean acid metabolism in Australian vascular epiphytes and some related species. Oecologia 57:129141.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zar, J. 1974. Biostatistical analysis. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. 620 pp.Google Scholar
Zotz, G. & Winter, K. 1994. Annual carbon balance and nitrogen-use efficiency in tropical C3 and CAM epiphytes. New Phytologist 126:481492.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed