Adaptations of plants and animals in the Desert habitat
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DESERT PLANT ADAPTATIONS
Environmental Stresses for Desert Plants:
1. Long periods of drought; unpredictable
precipitation
2. High soil and leaf temperatures
3. Saline soils
Plants use anatomical, physiological and life history
mechanisms for coping with harsh desert
environments
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1. DROUGHT TOLERATORS
1a. Evergreen shrubs
“True xerophytes”
High root-to-shoot ratio: take up a lot of water,
transpire less. Cost: low maximum growth rates
Creosote bush is prime example
• Extensive rooting system helps collect
moisture from large soil volume
• Withstands very low water potentials
• High rates of photosynthesis at high
temperatures
• Sheds some leaves in extreme drought
• Flowers opportunistically
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Jojoba is another drought
tolerator
• Can alter leaf size and
color (pubescence)
depending on season of
growth
• Leaf angle can
respond to diurnal
changes in sun angle
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• Plants cool by
evapotranspiration
when water is
available
• Smaller leaves
cool faster than
large leaves
(thinner boundary
layers)
• Vertical leaves
have highest
irradiation in early
morning and
evening
Leaf size and angle of orientation help reduce
heat loading
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1b. Succulents: Cacti, “century” plants, and euphorbias
Contain spongy parenchyma to store water
Low surface-to-volume ratio
Grow slowly, but some can become quite large
Photosynthetic stems
Shallow roots absorb water whenever possible
Adaptations to minimize herbivory
• Spines
• Camouflage (e.g., stone plants, Lithops sp.)
Many species not frost resistant
• O. polyacantha can tolerate –17°C
Physiological adaptations
• CAM physiology (Figure)
• High water use efficiency
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What is a cactus?
Cactaceae is a New World family
Stem succulent with areoles, multi-lobed stigma, many
stamens
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More Opuntia adaptations
Jointed stems
Vegetative propagation
Leaves early in season
Can dehydrate and rehydrate
Spines and glochids
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Parry’s agave
Basal rosette of succulent leaves
Flowers once, then dies
(monocarpic, semelparous)
CAM photosynthesis
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CAM-idling: When conditions are extremely arid, CAM plants
leave their stomata closed night and day. Oxygen given off in
photosynthesis is used for respiration and CO2 given off in
respiration is used for photosynthesis.
CAM photosynthesis used by many succulent species
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2. DROUGHT AVOIDERS
2a. Drought deciduous shrubs
Leaves not drought tolerant but inexpensive to
produce
High maximum photosynthetic rates
Limited photosynthetic period
May have carbohydrate storage for rapid
manufacture of new leaves when conditions become
favorable
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Ocotillo is drought-
deciduous
• 4-5 leaf crops/year
• Leaf-out after rain
• Stems photosynthesize
• Very shallow roots
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Blue paloverde is
drought-deciduous
• Photosynthetic stems
• Microphyllous leaves
• One crop of leaves/year
• Thorns
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2. DROUGHT AVOIDERS
2b. Phreatophytes
Deep root systems tap into capillary fringe above
water table
Seeds of many legumes require scarification
(abrasion by sand and gravel in stream) for
germination
Regeneration niche is critical
Examples includecottonwoods, willows, some
leguminous subtrees like mesquite
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Velvet mesquite
• DEEP roots (to 160 ft!)
• Microphyllous leaves
• Winter deciduous
• Expanding across TX
and southern NM in
desert grassland
More about woody
encroachment next week
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2. DROUGHT AVOIDERS
2c. Ephemerals (“annuals”)
Grow only when water is available
Life span of weeks to months
Rapid photosynthetic and growth rates
Cooled via transpiration (can’t tolerate drought)
• May not possess xeromorphic features
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Summer annuals are more likely to have xeromorphic leaves
Desert mallow
• Stellate trichomes reduce
water loss
• Palisade cells on both
sides of leaf
Russian thistle
• Thick cuticle
• Water-storing cells
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2c. Ephemerals (con’t)
Winter annuals
• Seeds germinate from Sept. to Dec. (N. Hemisphere)
• Mostly C3 plants
• Rosettes initially for warmth; elongate later
• Solar tracking of leaves (heliotropism) to maximize
light collection during the short wet period, which is
the only growing season
Summer annuals
• Seeds germinate after heavier rains in summer
• May be C4 plants
• Grow rapidly away from soil surface
• High photosynthetic rates on bright days
Seeds must withstand herbivory; high diversity of annuals
correlates with rodent diversity!
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3. HALOPHYTES
Salt tolerant plants:
saltbush, greasewood,
saltgrass, and many others
Salt secreting glands on
leaves of some species
Osmoregulation: organic
acids and soluble
carbohydrates create a high
solute concentration in their
cells. Why?
Some think that CAM
evolved first in response to
salinity
palisade tissue
hypodermis
thick-walled fibers
protect midvein
Four-wing saltbush
salt-secreting glands