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  • Carnivorous plants  (1)
  • Host-parasite interface ultrastructure  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Carnivorous plants ; Drosera ; Supplementary feeding ; Fertilizing ; Growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Growth responses and accumulation of N and P were studied in two pygmy south-west Australian species of Drosera following supplementary feeding of arthropods (collembolans, Hypogastrura vernalis and fruit flies, Drosophila melanogaster) and/or a balanced mineral nutrient supplement (N as nitrate) via the roots. One feeding experiment used glasshouse-raised germlings from vegetative propagules (gemmae) of the perennial Drosera closterostigma, the other three (two on D. closterostigma and one on the annual D. glanduligera) involved natural populations engaging in natural captures of indigenous prey. All experiments recorded highly significant increases in plant dry matter, N and P (all plant age groups) and in reproductive performance (adult plants only) from artificial feeding of arthropods, but no apparent benefits from minerals alone or additive effects of minerals above that due to insects. Unresponsiveness to mineral nutrients was suggested to relate to inability of the species to use nitrate, while up to three-fold growth and nutrient uptake response to insects indicated that growth of natural populations might be severely limited by inadequate catches of prey. It is concluded that the highly nutrient-poor conditions typical of the habitat of pygmy species of Drosera may have promoted marked specialization towards carnivory and an attendant decline in ability to utilize soil-derived sources of nutrients.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1615-6102
    Keywords: Root hemiparasite ; Olax ; Host-parasite interface ultrastructure ; Apoplastic tracers ; Transport pathway ; Water: solute uptake
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Structural features of haustorial interface parenchyma of the root hemiparasiteOlax phyllanthi are described. Walls contacting host xylem are thickened non-uniformly with polysaccharides, not lignin, and show only a thin protective wall layer when abutting pits in walls of host xylem vessels or tracheids. Lateral walls of interface parenchyma exhibit an expanded middle layer of open fibrillar appearance, sometimes with, but mostly lacking adjoining layers of dense wall material. Free ribosomes and rough endoplasmic reticulum are prominent and occasional wall ingrowths present. Experiments involving transpirational feeding of the apoplast tracers lanthanum nitrate or uranyl acetate to host roots cut below haustorial connections, indicate effective apoplastic transfer from host to parasite root via the haustorium. Deposits of the tracers suggest a major pathway for water flow through host xylem pits, across the thin protective wall layer, and thence into the haustorium via the electronopaque regions of the terminal and lateral walls of the contact parenchyma. Graniferous tracheary elements and walls of parenchyma cells of the body of the haustorium appear to participate in tracer flow as do walls of cortical cells, stele parenchyma and xylem conducting elements of the parasite root, suggesting that both vascular and non-vascular routes are involved in extracytoplasmic transfer of xylem sap from host to parasite. The Casparian strip of the endodermis and the suberin lamella of the exodermis of theOlax root act as barriers to flow within the system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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