Departamento de Botânica e Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Cuiabá, Mato Grosso, CEP, Brazil.
Departamento de Biologia Aquática e Limnologia, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Manaus, Amazonas, CEP, Brazil.
Ann Bot. 2018 Nov 30;122(6):985-991. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcy098.
Even when adapted to flooding environments, the spatial distribution, growing strategies and anti-herbivore defences of plants face stressful conditions. Here we describe the effects of flooding on carbon allocation on growth, domatia and leaf production, and the herbivory on the myrmecophyte domatia-bearing Tococa coronata Benth. (Melastomataceae) growing along river banks in the Amazon region.
In an area of 80 000 m2 of riparian forest along the Juruena River we actively searched for individuals of T. coronata. In each plant we evaluated the size of the plant when producing the first domatium and determined its best predictor: (1) plant total height; (2) size of plants above flood level; or (3) length of time each plant spent underwater. We also compared the herbivory, internode elongation, foliar asymmetry and specific leaf weight between T. coronata individuals growing above and below the maximum flooding level. The distance to the river and the height of the first domatium produced were compared between T. coronata and its sympatric congener, T. bulifera.
We found that T. coronata invests in rapid growth in the early ontogenetic stages through an elongation of internodes rather than in constitutive anti-herbivore defences to leaves or domatia to exceed the maximum flooding level. Consequently, its leaf herbivory was higher when compared with those produced above the flooding level. Individuals with leaves above flood levels produce coriaceous leaves and ant-domatias. Thus, flooding seems to trigger changes in growth strategies of the species. Furthermore, T. coronata occurs within the flood level, whereas its congener T. bullifera invariably occurs at sites unreachable by floods.
Even in conditions of high stress, T. coronata presents both physiological and adaptive strategies that allow for colonization and establishment within flooded regions. These mechanisms involve an extreme trade-off of postponing adult plant characteristics to rapid growth to escape flooding while minimizing carbon allocation to defence.
即使适应了洪水环境,植物的空间分布、生长策略和抗食草动物防御仍然面临着压力。本文描述了洪水对生长、叶腋和叶片产生的碳分配以及对河岸地区亚马逊河流域的蚁栖植物托科卡(Tococa coronata Benth.)(Melastomataceae)叶腋的食草动物的影响。
在沿茹鲁埃纳河的 80000 平方米的河岸森林地区,我们积极搜索托科卡的个体。在每株植物中,我们评估了产生第一个叶腋时的植物大小,并确定了其最佳预测因子:(1)植物总高度;(2)高于洪水位的植物大小;或(3)植物在水下的时间长度。我们还比较了生长在最高洪水位以上和以下的托科卡个体的食草性、节间伸长、叶片不对称性和比叶重。我们还比较了托科卡与同域近缘种托科卡(Tococa bulifera)的叶腋距河流的距离和产生的第一个叶腋的高度。
我们发现,托科卡通过节间伸长而不是通过叶片或叶腋的组成性抗食草动物防御来快速生长,从而在早期个体发育阶段进行投资,以超过最高洪水位。因此,与那些生长在洪水位以上的叶片相比,其叶片的食草性更高。位于洪水位以上的个体产生革质叶片和蚁栖叶。因此,洪水似乎引发了该物种生长策略的变化。此外,托科卡出现在洪水位范围内,而其近缘种托科卡总是出现在无法被洪水淹没的地方。
即使在高压力条件下,托科卡也具有生理和适应性策略,使其能够在洪水泛滥地区进行殖民和建立。这些机制涉及到将成年植物特征推迟到快速生长以逃避洪水的极端权衡,同时最大限度地减少对防御的碳分配。