Lecture 11- Plant and animal interactions Flashcards
What are the water (survival) strategies of xerophytes?
• CAM, C4 photosynthesis • Sclerophylly • Sunken (and closed) stomata • Low surface area (succulents, folded leaves) •Shedding of leaves in dry •Reflective leaves, azimuth and angle •Roots resistant to water loss to soil •Osmoregulation (lower cell water potential) • Increase root:shoot ratio (deep roots) (the more roots the more ability you have to get water -downside is that it costs energy) •Water storage (succulents, baobab) •Reproduction - mutualisms
What are some more water saving or survival strategies of xerophytes?
-Many adaptations relate to radiation load (e.g. reflectance) -Many relate to modifying latent heat flux (e.g. roots, CAM) -Some relate to tolerating heat and dehydration -decreasing or using latent heat flux= CAM store water so can evaporate if needed
What is a myrmecophyte?
– plant that has a mutualistic relationship with ants
What is mutualism?
-both species benefit from the interaction • A form of symbiosis* in which both species benefit from the relationship
What is the mutualism like in the mulga-ant mutualism?
-the mutualism occurs at several levels: nectar (sugary) ants eat it and in exchange they protect the plant from herbivores and fungi -invertase= due to that in the food, ants can only come here, dedication= obligate mutualism -elaiosome= on the seed, the ants want to eat it but seed left untached, (fatty food body on surface of seed) – seed dispersal/ favourable (heat and nutrients) germination environment
How much of Australia is tropical forest?
-very little, only 2.7 % is tropical rainforest -sub-tropical and temperate rainforest is 4.4% -rest of the land is wet and dry schlerophyll forests (43%) and woodland (48%)
What about the Aborigines and the tropical forest?
• Permanent populations of rainforest dwellers in North Queensland only; • Thesegroupsweredistinct- relatively small in stature • They did not clear rainforests. Shifting cultivation did not occur in Australia. • Rainforest Aborigines were hunter-gatherers.
What is the rainforest productivity like?
-high net primary productivity per meter contrast to xerophytic community -much higher productivity, CAM plants per meter are not as productivity -if go up in water then go up in productivity= as stomata can be open and more CO2 can come in, more thing can grow -arid areas have the lowest net primary productivity
What is the NPP (net primary productivity) of the rainforest?
-about zero -photosynthetic rate and -in net sense= beech forest more, have more mass -as when open stomata= can get lot of CO2 but lose from respiration
What are the real carbon sinks?
-projects to try to measure net productivity -so high primary productivity but lost a lot to respiration -net productivity close to zero -so the carbon sinks are not tropical forests but trees in borial forests like in the US and Europe -the ones in cold latitudes -lower gross productivity though
What happens to the water in the tropical forest?
-25% of water that falls as rainfall evaporates from leaf surfaces, so doesn’t get in, form of latent heat loss, lot of water never gets down -50% gets into stomata -25% runs into soil and river -almost all trees in the world= C3 plants -Amazon= major change is that chop C3 trees down and replace with C4 grasses -this changes the process from C3 to C4, C4 need less CO2, less water and have less leafs, so less wtare evaporates so less rainfall, runoff into river more
What about rainforest in australia and fruit?
• 84% of 774 spp. of rainforest trees have fleshy fruits: • Birds disperse 97% of species (seeds < 2 cm in diameter) • Mammals and cassowaries disperse other 3% • Unlike any other rainforest —— aus rainforest is different: -only 3 mammals and cassowary that can disperse seeds larger than 2 cm= cassowary, musky kangaroo, white-tailed rat and tree kangaroo (2 species) -in the other rainforrests much more of the seeds are larger and dispersed by larger animals (not as many by birds)
Are humans mutualists?
-humans are mutualists with fruit = as we need vitamin C, obligate mutualists -fruit is very important in the rainforest -well over a tonne of fruit per hectar in a rainforest falls on the ground in a year
Why is cassowary important fro the rianforest?
cassowary= long distance mover, several kilometers -important for genetic diversity, the mutualism with the dispersers allows dispersal away from the parent tree -• Largest vertebrate in Australian rainforests • Only animal capable of long distance seed dispersal • Up to 2 m tall • 10 -13 cm claw on inner toe • How important are they in the Australian rainforest?
What are the australian animals capable of dispersing large fruit?
• cassowary • musky rat-kangaroo • white-tailed uromys