Journal
OIKOS
Volume 94, Issue 3, Pages 433-441Publisher
MUNKSGAARD INT PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0706.2001.940306.x
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We investigated the potential for nonvascular epiphytic species (primarily lichens) toaffect the quality of different host tree species for the vascular epiphyte Tillandsia usneoides in the southeastern USA. Different host tree species had substantially different abundances of Tillandsia, and these abundances were correlated with the composition of nonvascular epiphyte communities. In greenhouse experiments Tillandsia grew significantly faster on the branches of Quercus Virginiana (a species with very high natural abundances of Tillandsia) when the dominant lichen on Q. virginiana was left intact than when the lichen was removed from the branches. In laboratory experiments, extracts from Cryptothecia rubrocincta, a lichen that was 10 times more common on poor host species for Tillandsia than on good host species, reduced Tillandsia seedling survival and growth in comparison to extracts from other species and rainwater. In field experiments, lichens increased the proportion of Tillandsia seeds and vegetative strands that adhered to the trunk of Ilex opaca (a poor Tillandsia host), but lichens did not affect propagule adherence to Q. virginiana. Our results are by no means exhaustive of the possibilities, but they suggest that the structure and diversity of vascular and nonvascular epiphytic communities that grow in different tree species may not be simply the product of host tree characteristics, but may also be influenced by interactions among the epiphytes themselves.
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