10. Forest Strategy Flashcards
1
Q
What is the CSR straregy theory, also known as Grime’s triangle? 3
A
2
Q
What are stress tolerators and what are some of the strategies they use? 11
A
- on the forest floor- resource limited
- low in light
- may be low in nutrients/water as trees prevent water from falling to ground
- must tolerate strees and optimise investment of resouces to match environment
- shade liight enriched in green and far red wavelengths
- partial shade also rich in blue
- plants can absorb wavelengthss above that aren’t filtered out by forest canopy
- rate of photosynthesis same as others
- do not respond to photoreceptor phytochrome telling them to grow in far red
- shade plants have more chlorophyll b per cholophyll a, allowing capture of light that reaches them, as b absorbs different wavelengths
- plants arrange leaves to optomise light capture
3
Q
Describe sun plants and how they capture light. 3
A
- sense far red light and respond by growing stems to get out of shade
- far red sensed by photoreceptor phytochrome
- minimise self shading with leaf arrangements eg. longer internodes between leaves
4
Q
Describe how sun and shade plants are best optomised for photosynthesis in their own ways. 6
A
- shade lants don’t waste resources making equipment for light it won’t get
- plants in dark areas can survive with less photsynthesis
- shade species ignore light signals and don’t attempt to change based on light capture
- shade plants have thinner leaves - don’t absorb enough light to be worth energy input
- pallisae layer much thinner in shade leaf
- shade plants have single layer of non-overlapping leaves, and fewer roots in relation to shoots/higher root/shoot ratio
5
Q
Describe how some plants avoid the light in order to survive. 6
A
- Mercuralis perenne/dog’s mercury lies between c and c
- can’t survive outside of woods - few, poor surviving seeds
- oxalis acetosella/wood sorrel between stress and weeds, doesn’t elongate stem
- folds leaves to avoid high light - controlled by blue light receptors
- both of the above become bleached and damaged if explosed to high light
- urtica diocia/stinging nettle between r and c - tolerates high light - opportunist in it
6
Q
What is urtica diocia and what strategy does it use for survival? 9
A
- semi-shade competitor
- nigh n requirement
- high protein content
- capable of high photosynthetic rates
- good acclimation potential
- good competitor - fast-growing, dense and high shoot thrusts
- grows in woodland margins, hedgerows and open
- hates alkaline soil
- grows in chalky, neolithic areas eg. south downs
7
Q
how do plants use light foraging to survive? 9
A
- eg. between c and s, rubus fruticosus/blackberry
- grows in tangles and can grow in dense shade
- urtica diocia takes adventage of gaps for light
- horizontal foraging via stolons eg. strawberries and raspberries
- grow outwards, find sunlight, put down roots
- can go over or underground, low cost investment
- vertical foraging eg. ivy - good photosynthesis at high and low levels
- long-wined with leathery leaves
- open out in light - sun morphology
8
Q
How do plants use seasonal shade avoidance to survive? 4
A
- eg. Ranunculus ficaria/lesser celandine and Hythacinthoides non-scripta/bluebell
- deciduous understory plants that leaf/flower in spring or autumn to avoid competition
- produce underground bulbs, capture resources and store them there
- can come back very quickly