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Journal ArticleDOI

Crassulacean acid metabolism in australian vascular epiphytes and some related species

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TLDR
It is concluded that CAM is widespread in Australian epiphytes, most prevalent in species found in exposed microhabitats where the growing conditions are characterised by relatively high light intensities and short but frequent periods of water stress.
Abstract
The occurrence of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) among epiphytes and related plant species from tropical and subtropical rainforests in Eastern Australia was investigated. As judged from δ13C value and the absence of Kranz anatomy, indications of CAM were found in 66 species belonging to the families, Polypodiaceae (3), Orchidaceae (55), Asclepiadaceae (6) and Rubiaceae (2).Two thirds of orchidaceous plants examined appeared to use CAM. Those species with thicker leaves generally had less negative δ13C values, as did those species growing on more exposed sites; leaves thicker than about 1 mm in most species yielded δ13C values indicative of pronounced CAM. Two leafless species, Chiloschista phyllorhiza and Taeniophyllum malianum, which depend on chloroplast-containing, stomata-less roots for photosynthesis also showed δ13C values typical of CAM. Pseudobulbs and swollen stems, a characteristic of many orchids, were usually somewhat enriched in 13C compared to corresponding leaves.In Polypodiaceae CAM was found in the genus Pyrrosia. While δ13C values were generally less negative with increasing frond thickness, the leaf morphology was extremely variable within species. Pyrrosia confluens plants from shaded habitats had long, relatively thin and darkgreen fronds whereas specimens from sun-exposed sites were characterized by short, thick, bleached fronds. Both types showed the capacity for nocturnal accumulation of titratable acidity and exhibited continuous net CO2 fixation during 12 h light/12 h dark cycles under laboratory conditions. Shade-fronds showed this capacity even when irradiance was lower than 2% of full sunlight during the 12 h light period.In Asclepiadaceae CAM was found in species of two genera which usually have fleshy leaves, Hoya and Dischidia. In Rubiaceae CAM was recorded in two genera of epiphytic ant plants, Hydnophytum and Myrmecodia.It is concluded that CAM is widespread in Australian epiphytes. It is most prevalent in species found in exposed microhabitats where the growing conditions are characterised by relatively high light intensities and short but frequent periods of water stress.

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Evolutionary and Ecological Aspects of Photosynthetic Pathway Variation

TL;DR: C4 and CAM photosynthesis are evolutionarily derived from C3 photosynthesis, with a tendency toward ecological adaptation of C4 plants into warm, monsoonal climates and CAM plants into water-limited habitats and in an anthropogenically altered CQ2 environment, C 4 plants may lose their competitive advantage over C3 plants.
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Environmental and physiological determinants of carbon isotope discrimination in terrestrial plants

TL;DR: The effective use of Δ across its full range of applications will require a holistic view of the interplay between environmental control and physiological modulation of the environmental signal.
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Ecophysiology of Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM)

TL;DR: Examination of quantitative census data for CAM diversity and biomass suggests that the larger CAM domains are those systems which are governed by a network of interacting stress factors requiring versatile responses and not systems where a single stress factor strongly prevails.
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The physiological ecology of vascular epiphytes: current knowledge, open questions

TL;DR: It is argued that by far the most relevant abiotic constraint for growth and vegetative function of vascular epiphytes is water shortage, while other factors such as nutrient availability or irradiation are generally of inferior importance.
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Disentangling a rainforest food web using stable isotopes: dietary diversity in a species-rich ant community

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that stable isotopes provide a powerful tool for quantitative analyses of trophic niche partitioning and plasticity in complex and diverse tropical omnivore communities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon isotope fractionation in plants

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a mathematical model to predict the overall isotope discrimination in terms of diffusion, interconversion, incorporation, and respiration in C 3, C 4 and crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) photosynthetic pathways.
Book

A dictionary of the flowering plants and ferns

TL;DR: A comprehensive and indispensable reference to the generic and family names of flowering plants and ferns can be found in the 8th edition of the Dictionary of Ferns as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The tropical rainforest

Robert M. May
- 01 Oct 1975 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Stratification of δ13C values of leaves in Amazonian rain forests.

TL;DR: The contribution of soil respiration to the photosynthesis of the shade flora in the Amazon forest was evaluated by measuring the δ13C values of leaves collected at different levels in two forest communities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of salinity and humidity on δ13C value of halophytes—Evidence for diffusional isotope fractionation determined by the ratio of intercellular/atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 under different environmental conditions

TL;DR: Seedlings of two mangrove species and Phaseolus vulgaris plants were grown in a range of salinities and humidities in controlled environment chambers, and the results are consistent with fractionation being due both to diffusion in air and to carboxylation in the leaf.
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