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      Patterns of morphological leaf traits among pteridophytes along humidity and temperature gradients in the Bolivian Andes

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      Functional Plant Biology
      CSIRO Publishing

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          Abstract

          Macroecological patterns of leaf traits can be used to assess adaptive responses of plants to environmental stress. Here we present the first such study on a large number of fern species (403) along gradients of elevation (temperature) and humidity. To assess how the representation of traits such as degree of lamina dissection, leaf length, leaf mass per area (LMA), trichome density, venation density, stomatal density, and of adaptive strategies such as poikilohydry vary at the community and species levels in response to changes in humidity and temperature in the Bolivian Andes, we (1) compared whole pteridophyte communities at 14 sites, and (2) analysed intraspecific variation of the morphological traits of 17 fern species along an elevational gradient at 1700–3400 m in humid forest. Among the fern communities of the 14 sites, leaf length decreased with elevation and aridity, LMA increased with elevation, and trichome density and venation density increased with aridity. The study of intraspecific variation among 17 species showed an increase of stomatal density with elevation in six of 11 species (filmy ferns lacked stomata), an increase of specific weight in 15 species, a decrease of trichome density in seven of 10 species (other species lacked hairs), and a decrease of venation density in seven of 10 cases. Some of these trends can be interpreted adaptively: leaf thickness appears to increase in situations with low nutrient availability rather than with low water availability, whereas a dense cover of scales or hairs serves as a protection against insolation or as a vehicle for the absorption of water in poikilohydric species. In arid areas, trichome density increased with elevation, while it decreased with elevation in cloudy and humid regions. For most traits, variation was more pronounced at the community than at the species level, except for stomatal density, which varied much more strongly within than between species. Several of these morphological and anatomical characters can be used to infer palaeoclimatic conditions based on fossil pteridophyte floras.

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          Plant Ecological Strategies: Some Leading Dimensions of Variation Between Species

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            From tropics to tundra: global convergence in plant functioning.

            Despite striking differences in climate, soils, and evolutionary history among diverse biomes ranging from tropical and temperate forests to alpine tundra and desert, we found similar interspecific relationships among leaf structure and function and plant growth in all biomes. Our results thus demonstrate convergent evolution and global generality in plant functioning, despite the enormous diversity of plant species and biomes. For 280 plant species from two global data sets, we found that potential carbon gain (photosynthesis) and carbon loss (respiration) increase in similar proportion with decreasing leaf life-span, increasing leaf nitrogen concentration, and increasing leaf surface area-to-mass ratio. Productivity of individual plants and of leaves in vegetation canopies also changes in constant proportion to leaf life-span and surface area-to-mass ratio. These global plant functional relationships have significant implications for global scale modeling of vegetation-atmosphere CO2 exchange.
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              Ferns diversified in the shadow of angiosperms.

              The rise of angiosperms during the Cretaceous period is often portrayed as coincident with a dramatic drop in the diversity and abundance of many seed-free vascular plant lineages, including ferns. This has led to the widespread belief that ferns, once a principal component of terrestrial ecosystems, succumbed to the ecological predominance of angiosperms and are mostly evolutionary holdovers from the late Palaeozoic/early Mesozoic era. The first appearance of many modern fern genera in the early Tertiary fossil record implies another evolutionary scenario; that is, that the majority of living ferns resulted from a more recent diversification. But a full understanding of trends in fern diversification and evolution using only palaeobotanical evidence is hindered by the poor taxonomic resolution of the fern fossil record in the Cretaceous. Here we report divergence time estimates for ferns and angiosperms based on molecular data, with constraints from a reassessment of the fossil record. We show that polypod ferns (> 80% of living fern species) diversified in the Cretaceous, after angiosperms, suggesting perhaps an ecological opportunistic response to the diversification of angiosperms, as angiosperms came to dominate terrestrial ecosystems.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Functional Plant Biology
                Functional Plant Biol.
                CSIRO Publishing
                1445-4408
                2007
                2007
                : 34
                : 11
                : 963
                Article
                10.1071/FP07087
                32689424
                650dbc6e-3a2a-4d60-a3d3-5c07c7962d3a
                © 2007
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