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Water relations and carbon dioxide exchange of epiphytic lichens in the Namib fog desert
Authors:Otto L Lange  TG Allan Green  Angelika Meyer  Hans Zellner
Institution:aUniversität Würzburg, Julius-von-Sachs-Institut für Biowissenschaften, Lehrstuhl für Botanik II, Julius-von-Sachs-Platz 3, D-97082 Würzburg, Germany;bBiological Sciences, University of Waikato, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract:Although there is only negligible rainfall, frequent nocturnal fog, dew and high air humidity support a luxurious lichen vegetation in the coastal zone of the central Namib Desert (Namibia). In earlier publications, we have studied ecophysiological performance of a series of epilithic and terrestrial lichens. Here, we have extended this work to three epiphytic species (Heterodermia namaquana, Ramalina lacera, and Xanthoria turbinata) that inhabit the sparse perennial shrubs growing in this area. Our intention, monitoring lichen CO2 exchange, their water relations and microclimate conditions, was to determine the functional mechanisms that allow these epiphytes to exist under the special conditions of a fog desert. Measurements were conducted mainly during the spring season.The epiphytic lichens showed response patterns very similar to the epilithic and epigaeic species at the same site. Their metabolism was activated through moistening by dew and/or fog during the night and, in the very early morning, they exhibited the typical brief peak of net photosynthesis (NP) between sunrise and desiccation. The thalli were almost completely dry for the remainder of the day. Average duration of the positive NP during the morning peak was about 3 h. Dew condensation, alone, resulted in activation that provided 58–63% of integrated carbon income (ΣNP) as compared to fog (plus dew). In the late afternoon, there was a tendency for hydration to increase again, due to water vapour uptake at higher air humidity, and this allowed on some days a brief additional period of very low rates of photosynthesis shortly before sunset.Light response of photosynthesis showed “sun-plant” characteristics with saturation around 1000 μmol m−2 s−1 photosynthetically active photon flux density (PPFD). Light compensation point (LCP) of CO2 exchange after sunrise was highly dependent on actual water content (WC) for X. turbinata: at low hydration it was ca. 10 μmol m−2 s−1 PPFD whilst, at high WC, it was almost 80 μmol m−2 s−1 PPFD. In contrast, LCP of R. lacera was almost independent of WC. This phenomenon was probably due to differences in thallus structure.Maximal attained NP and daily ΣNP both showed a saturation-type response to previous maximal nocturnal WC. Neither parameter was increased substantially when higher maximal thallus WCs were produced by experimental moistening in the night. All three species, despite their different morphologies, performed optimally at the highest nocturnal moistening achieved by natural fog and were not able to make use of higher hydration.The three studied epiphytes were similar in their chlorophyll-related rates of NP. Due to lower chlorophyll content, dry weight and carbon-related NP of X. turbinata was only about one-third of that of the other two species. The average carbon income on days with fog and/or dew hydration during the spring season amounted to 2.4 and 2.1 mgC (gC)−1 day−1 (related to thallus carbon content) for H. namaquana and R. lacera, respectively. This primary production was of similar magnitude to those found for the terrestrial species at the same site.
Keywords:Dew  Photosynthesis  Production  Heterodermia namaquana  Ramalina lacera  Xanthoria turbinata
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