In both epiphytic and terrestrial habitats, some clonal facultative epiphytes increase their survival and growth through clonal integration (resource sharing between connected ramets of clonal plants). As resources such as water and nutrients may be more limited and heterogeneously distributed in epiphytic than in terrestrial habitats, effects of clonal integration on survival and growth of facultative epiphytes are expected to be greater in epiphytic habitats (forest canopies) than in terrestrial habitats (forest understories).
To test the effects of clonal integration on survival and growth of facultative epiphytes, Prof. LIU Wenyao and his team of Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) conducted two field experiments with the evergreen, facultatively epiphytic, rhizomatous fern Selliguea griffithiana in both epiphytic and terrestrial habitats in a montane moist evergreen broadleaved forest in south-west China.
The researchers examined the effects of rhizome connection (i.e. with vs. without clonal integration) on survival and growth of single ramets of S. griffithiana from both epiphytic habitats (in the interstices of bark and in the junctions of trunks or branches of host trees) and terrestrial habitats (on the ground of the forest understorey) of rhizome connection on performance of ramets. They selected
Both the single-ramet and the plot experiments showed that rhizome connection contributed greatly to survival and growth of the facultative epiphytic fern S. griffithiana in both forest canopies and forest understories. The effects of rhizome connections were mainly due to resource sharing (clonal integration), but increasing anchoring capacity may be an additional mechanism. Results of both experiments also suggested that the effects of clonal integration on survival and/or growth of S. griffithiana were stronger in forest canopies than in forest understories, supporting the hypothesis that stronger integration is favored in more stressful and/or more heterogeneous environments.
The study entitled “Higher clonal integration in the facultative epiphytic fern Selliguea griffithiana growing in the forest canopy compared with the forest understorey” has been published on Annals of Botany.
Contact:
LIU Wenyao, Ph.D Principal Investigator
Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Mengla, Yunnan 666303, China
Tel: 86 871 65153787
Fax: 86 871 65160916
E-mail: liuwy@xtbg.ac.cn
Selliguea griffithiana (Image by LU Huazheng)
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