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Experimental transplants reveal strong environmental effects on the growth of non‐vascular epiphytes in Afromontane forests
Authors:Åsa Stam  Johannes Enroth  Itambo Malombe  Petri Pellikka  Jouko Rikkinen
Affiliation:1. Department of Biosciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;2. East African Herbarium, Botany Department, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya;3. Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;4. Finnish Museum of Natural History, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract:Transplant studies can provide valuable information on the growth responses of epiphytic bryophytes and lichens to environmental factors. We studied the growth of six epiphyte species at three sites in moist Afromontane forests of Taita Hills, Kenya. With 558 pendant transplants, we documented the growth of four bryophytes and two lichens over 1 yr. The transplants were placed into the lower canopy of one forest site in an upper montane zone, and two forest sites in a lower montane zone. Several pendant moss species grew very well in the cool and humid environment of the upper montane forest, with some transplants more than doubling their biomass during the year. Conversely, all transplanted taxa performed poorly in the lower montane zone, presumably because of the unfavorable combination of ample moisture with excessive warmth and insufficient light which characterizes the lower canopy in dense lower montane forests. The results demonstrate that pendant transplants can be used for monitoring growth of non‐vascular epiphytes in tropical forests. The starting weight of 0.25 g for pendant transplants worked well and can be recommended for future studies.
Keywords:canopy     Heterodermia     microclimate  moss     Orthostichella        Squamidium        Usnea     vegetation
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