Lecture 7- Coping with aridity and drought: CAM Flashcards
What happened to Australia in the Tertiary (Paeogene and Neogene) and what were its consequences?
- Climate changed
- warm, humid, rainforests initially widespread
- circumpolar current: cooling of Antarctica
- reduced wind-bearing rains over Australia and increased aridity from Oligocene (30 my ago)
- contraction of rainforest
- evolution and expansion of more arid adapted plants e.g. sclerophylls and animals adapted to them
What is a xerophyte?
-a plant that is adapted to living in dry habitat, a desert plant
What is unusual about the desert flora of Australia?
- in Australia no cacti in the desert unlike in the US
- in Afrcia, no cacti either but succulent like plants that are capable of storing water
- Sonoran desert: in the US
What is the predominant plant in the Sonoran desert (US)?
- Saguaro cactus
- huge, 20 m tall
- can store up to 5 tonnes of water
What catus was the major invadoer in Australia?
-Opuntia (prickly pear)
Why and how was Opuntia first brought to Australia?
- first imported to support the growth of cochineal insects (and to maintain spiffy red coats on parade), it subsequently, and briefly, lent ambience to early vineyards
- cochineal insects eat the pear and they make dye and that is used in dying army uniforms
- so brought here by the English in the early 1700s
What is Carmine?
- the colour of the cochineal insects insides
- used in dying many thing (drinks, food, clothes…)
How quickly was Opuntia (prickly pear) invading Australia?
-From a few plants in 1840, it expanded to:
• 4 million ha in 1890
• 6.3 million ha in 1913 • 17.6 million ha in early 1920s
• Nearly 30 million ha by 1930
-300 square meters per second
What was the total biomass of Opuntia in Australia?
- Rate of advance = 100 ha per hour!
- Average biomass of 620 tonnes per ha
- total biomass in 1929 of 1.5 gigatonnes
What did people try to do to solve the Opuntia invasion?
–people tried to slash and burn them
-tried chemical warfare
-didn’t work very well
-Arsenic can still be detected today from that attempt
- Slash and burn
• 100s of tonnes of arsenic pentoxide were used to kill the prickly pear to no affect.
-the poison used over the years in hundreds of tonnes of arsenic and black= weapons to kill the prickly pears (tanks)
What are environmental weeds?
-those species that invade native communities or ecosystems - they are undesirable from an ecological perspective, but not necessarily an economic one.
What are serious environmental weeds?
-those that cause major modification to species richness, abundance or ecosystem function.
What are very serious environmental weeds?
-those that can totally and permanently destroy an ecosystem.
Why do many environmental weeds have a competitive advantage over native plants?
• Better adaptations to the environment
• Resistance to Australian insects, fungi and other
organisms
Why was prickly pear so successful?
- Succulence:plant tissues that have low surface to volume ratio= squichy and full of water
- Cuticle: the surface of the leaf
- very good
- can break it away and keep for half a year, then can put in the grond and it will grow as it could survive on the water it had