999 resultados para orchid species
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A floristic survey for the family Orchidaceae was undertaken in a coastal forest area of ca. 8 km2 in the Picinguaba Development Center of the Serra do Mar State Park, in the municipality of Ubatuba, Brazil. The sampling used all tracks and roads of the area, up to the altitude of 50 m.s.m. and resulted in 77 species distributed in 45 genera. The spacial distribution of the species was plotted in maps of the nine physiognomical units identified for the area, based on 1:8.000 and 1:25.000 aerial photographs, and field observations. The results are shown in 1:10.000 topographic charts. Ninety percent of the species occur in at least 3 physiognomical units while 60% only occurred in a single unit, what indicates that the orchids can be used to characterize the vegetation even in large scales.
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Epidendrum puniceoluteum is an endemic orchid of Atlantic Rainforest, restricted to few populations only due to the destruction and fragmentation of its native habitat. Here, we report on the development of 10 microsatellite markers isolated from this orchid species. Genetic variability was characterized in two distant populations from Brazil coast. The number of alleles observed for each locus ranged from two to 12 and with an average of 6.4 alleles per locus. These microsatellites should be valuable tools for studying both fine-scale genetic structure of scattered E. puniceoluteum population and patterns will be useful genetic markers for other closely related taxa.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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A new orchid species, Vanilla paludosa, native to marshy forests close to cerrado vegetation in the state of So Paulo, Brazil, is described and illustrated. The relationship of V. paludosa to other species of the genus is discussed.
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In SW Ethiopia, the moist evergreen Afromontane forest has become extremely fragmented and most of the remnants are intensively managed for coffee cultivation (Coffea arabica), with considerable impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Because epiphytic orchids are potential indicators for forest quality and a proxy for overall forest biodiversity, we assessed the effect of forest management and forest fragmentation on epiphytic orchid diversity. We selected managed forest sites from both large and small forest remnants and compared their epiphytic orchid diversity with the diversity of natural unfragmented forest. We surveyed 339 canopy trees using rope climbing techniques. Orchid richness decreased and community composition changed, from the natural unfragmented forest, over the large managed forest fragments to the small managed forest fragments. This indicates that both forest management and fragmentation contribute to the loss of epiphytic orchids. Both the removal of large canopy trees typical for coffee management, and the occurrence of edge effects accompanying forest fragmentation are likely responsible for species loss and community composition changes. Even though some endangered orchid species persist even in the smallest fragments, large managed forest fragments are better options for the conservation of epiphytic orchids than small managed forests. Our results ultimately show that even though shade coffee cultivation is considered as a close-to-nature practice and is promoted as biodiversity conservation friendly, it cannot compete with the epiphytic orchid conservation benefit generated by unmanaged moist evergreen Afromontane forests.
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The moist evergreen Afromontane forest of SW Ethiopia has become extremely fragmented and most remnants are intensively managed for cultivation of coffee (Coffea arabica). We investigated the distributions of epiphytic orchids in shade trees and their understory in forests with contrasting management intensity to determine biodiversity losses associated with coffee cultivation and to determine the capacity of coffee shrubs to act as refugia for orchid species. We studied epiphytic orchids in managed forests and natural forests and recorded orchid diversity and abundance in different tree zones of 339 trees and in the understory. Coffee management was associated with a downward shift of orchid species as orchid species were occurring in significantly lower tree zones in managed forest. The number of shrubs in the understory of managed forest was not higher than in natural forests, yet orchid abundance was higher in the understory of managed forests. Local extinctions of epiphytic orchids and species losses in the outer tree zones (a contraction of habitat) in managed forests are most likely driven by losses of large, complex-structured climax trees, and changes in microclimate, respectively. Coffee shrubs and their shade trees in managed forests are shown here to be a suitable habitat for only a limited set of orchid species. As farmers continue to convert natural forest into managed forest for coffee cultivation, further losses of habitat quality and collateral declines in regional epiphytic orchid diversity can be expected. Therefore, the conservation of epiphytic orchid diversity, as well as other components of diversity of the coffee forests, must primarily rely on avoiding coffee management intensification in the remaining natural forest. Convincing farmers to keep forest-climax trees in their coffee forest and to tolerate orchids on their coffee shrubs may also contribute to a more favorable conservation status of orchids in Ethiopian coffee agroecosystems.
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The orchid Dactylorhiza sambucina shows a stable and dramatic flower-color polymorphism, with both yellow- and purple-flowered individuals present in natural populations throughout the range of the species in Europe. The evolutionary significance of flower-color polymorphisms found in many rewardless orchid species has been discussed at length, but the mechanisms responsible for their maintenance remain unclear. Laboratory experiments have suggested that behavioral responses by pollinators to lack of reward availability might result in a reproductive advantage for rare-color morphs. Consequently, we performed an experiment varying the relative frequency of the two color morphs of D. sambucina to test whether rare morph advantage acted in the natural habitat of the species. We show here clear evidence from this manipulative experiment that rare-color morphs have reproductive advantage through male and female components. This is the first demonstration, to our knowledge, that negative frequency-dependent selection through pollinator preference for rare morphs can cause the maintenance of a flower-color polymorphism.
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本研究在野外调查的基础上,采用随机扩增多态DNA (RAPD)分析和形态学方法,研究了我国三种珍稀濒危兰科植物硬叶兜兰(Paphiopedilummicranthum)、麻栗坡兜兰(P. malipoense)和独花兰(Changnienia amoena)的遗传多样性与群体遗传结构,主要结果如下: 1.采用1 2个引物对分布于我国云贵地区的4个硬叶兜兰群体共161个体进行RAPD扩增和分析,得出物种水平的多态条带百分率(PPB)为71.6%,Nci的基因多样度(h)为0.217,Shannon多样性指数(1)为0.3301;4个群体的平均多样性水平为PPB=45.2%,h=0.1457,1= 0.2204:低于远交兰花的平均水平。分子方差分析(AMOVA)表明,在总遗传变异中,群体间遗传变异占20.31%.群体内占79.69%;POPGENE给出的基因分化系数 (Gst)为0.2958;遗传分化略高于远交物种的平均水平。空间自相关分析表明,所检测的两个群体中存在明显的空间结构,基因型在群体中以不同的小斑块存在。遗传距离和空间距离不存在相关关系。 2.用于麻栗坡兜兰的RAPD引物同上,但取样范围只有贵州的2个群体共10个个体。就所研究的个体柬看,麻栗坡兜兰的遗传多样性明显低于远交兰花物种的平均水平。物种水平上,多态条带百分率(PPB)为49.5%。Nei的基因多样度(h)为0. 1174, Shannon多样性指数(I)为0.1764:在群体水平上,上述三个指标的平均值则分别为12. 75%、0.0486和0.0712,均大大低于硬叶兜兰。然而,尽管作了种种努力,麻栗坡兜兰的取样个体数量仍很少,因此所得结果可能会有误差。 3.用16个引物对分布于河南、湖北、湖南、江西4个省11个独花兰群体共216个体进行了RA PD扩增和分析,独花兰在物种水平PPB=80. 7%,h=0.197.1=0. 3116;在群体水平,上述三个指标的平均值则分别为40. 9%、0.1247和0. 1902,均低于远交兰花的平均水平。AMOVA分析表明,11个独花兰群体间的遗传变异占43.48%,群体内的占56.52%:在神农架和新宁地区内部,群体间的遗传变异分别占13.68%和49.3g%(AMOVA)。POPGENE给出的11个群体的基因分化系数(Gst)为0.3580.神农架和新宁地区内的Gst,值分别为0.1194和0.2597。可见,群体间的遗传分化明显高于远交物种的平均水平。空间自相关分析表明,独花兰的遗传变异在群体内不存在明显的空间结构。群体之间的遗传距离和空间距离不存在相关关系。 4.对独花兰7个群体形态性状的分析发现,12个形态性状在群体内均有较高的变异性,cv值变动于0.022-0.30O。庐山群体(LS)在所有性状上的平均值均为最高。营养性状和花部性状的变异性基本一致。除花葶长和花距直径与某些花部性状之间没有显著的相关关系外,各性状之间均有显著的相关性。对XN4群体的统计没有发现假磷茎数目与其他性状之间存在显著相关性。 根据以上对硬叶兜兰、麻粟坡兜兰和独花兰遗传多样性和群体遗传结构韵研究,结合其他方面的资料;对三种兰花的濒危机制进行了初步的分析。首先,人为采挖和破坏是导致这些兰花物种濒危的直接原因,尤其是麻栗坡兜兰。其次, 适宜兰花生存的生境正在只益萎缩、退化和片段化。这两方面因素的共同作用导致上述兰花群体的数目和规模日益下降,由此引发的遗传多样性降低和遗传结构的改变进一步加剧其濒危状况。对于独花兰而言,较低的繁殖能力又使其生存状态雪上加霜。针对三个物种不同的繁殖特性和遗传学状况,提出如下保护措施。(1)硬叶兜兰由于繁殖能力较强、现存个体尚多,遗传多样性损失不甚严重,因此以保护其所在的生境为基础、实施原位保护,是比较合适的保护策略。(2)麻粟坡兜兰目前受破坏程度非常严重;所剩个体很少,遗传多样性较低,已经很难进行有效的原位保护。因此;应利用迁地保护手段抢救目前尚存的个体。(3)独花兰的繁殖能力较弱,因此在保护生境和严禁采摘的基础上,可采用人工授粉等方式,提高结实率、增加繁殖效率,促使其复壮:在进行迁地保护时,则应注意不同群体间存在较大遗传变异而群体内多样性较低这一现实。
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植物生态学特性诸如植物的分布特征、与生境的关系、生物学特性、繁殖成功特点及其影响因素等方面的详细资料是研究珍稀植物种群结构和动态以及开展保育生物学研究的基础。 黄龙沟草本植物群落具有较为丰富的植物种类。在所调查样方中(N=662)共有维管植物124种,分属于37科91属,有54个中国特有种。其中兰科植物多达21属33种,中国特有种有12个,新种一个。如此众多的地生兰科植物聚集在面积不到1平方千米的沟内,而且部分兰科植物种类在沟内形成优势草本群落,这在中国地生兰的分布区域中是不多见的。大多数物种,包括兰科植物在内,出现的频率都较小,并且分布不均匀。种间关联分析和相关分析表明黄龙沟优势兰科植物可以分为两组。一组包括无苞杓兰、黄花杓兰、二叶根茎兰、广布小碟兰、少花鹤顶兰和西藏杓兰,主要分布在光线充足但又具有一定遮阴条件的环境中;另一组包括筒距兰、沼兰、珊瑚兰、小斑叶兰、布袋兰、小花舌唇兰和小叶对叶兰,它们主要分布于荫蔽的环境中。这些兰科植物在组内大多呈现显著的正相关关系,组间大多呈现显著的负相关关系,说明黄龙沟兰科植物在资源利用方式上可能产生了分化。 黄龙沟兰科植物主要分布在两种生境中,即钙化滩流地和一小片森林中。在这两种生境中微环境条件以及兰科植物的种类组成、数量特征和分布格局的差异都很大。钙化滩流地的兰科植物种类数目和每个样方中包含的兰科植物种类数目都比森林生境中的高。钙化滩流地中发现有30种兰科植物,六种最为常见的是无苞杓兰、黄花杓兰、西藏杓兰、广布小碟兰、二叶根茎兰和少花鹤顶兰,它们的密度与树木盖度呈负相关关系。森林生境中有21种兰科植物分布,其中筒距兰和斑叶兰出现最多,其密度与树木盖度呈正相关关系。光照强度可能对兰科植物的分布起到重要的决定作用。兰科植物彼此之间对繁殖成功以及植株间建立的相互促进作用以及土壤中高的钙含量很可能是形成黄龙沟兰科植物多样性的重要原因,而钙化滩流地中的溪流对建立和维持兰科植物生存所必须的稳定环境条件起到至关重要的作用,如果随意改变水流的方向或减少水流的流量,将给某些兰科植物带来灾难性的后果。 黄龙沟钙化滩流地中斑块的大小对物种数(含兰科植物)具有强烈的影响,即斑块越大,所包含的物种数量越多。物种-面积关系符合幂函数方程S=cAZ的规律。中等尺度的斑块(1-10 m2)包含的物种数(含兰科植物)的增长速度最快,而在斑块面积大于10 m2时,物种数增长速度最小。 少花鹤顶兰是多年生、多次结实的具有克隆能力的地生兰科植物,是中国特有种。黄龙沟少花鹤顶兰每个花序的平均花朵数为3(1-7)朵。叶和花的形态指标在年季间无显著变异。2005-2007年3年间的开花物候没有明显的差异,花期始于6月中旬,于7月底至8月初结束,持续约6-7周,80-90%的花在7月初的开花高峰期开放,属花集中开放模式。花寿命与是否授粉密切相关,成功授粉的花寿命比没有授粉的花寿命短。少花鹤顶兰是自交亲和的,但其结实完全依赖于两种熊蜂的传粉,不存在自动自花授粉和无融合生殖现象。柱头可授性和花粉活力可维持15天左右。繁殖成功率年季间的变化很大,并表现出逐年下降的趋势,花粉移走率为18-51%,自然结实率为10-36%。繁殖成功与开花物候之间的关系不显著,但与某一特定时刻的开花数量(密度)有关。生境对少花鹤顶兰的形态和繁殖成功率有显著的影响。在荫蔽生境中的个体比开阔地中的个体大,但繁殖成功率却低于开阔地的。花序密度(丛的大小)对少花鹤顶兰繁殖成功的影响比较复杂,不同大小的丛,对花粉移走率的影响格局和方式不同,而对结实率几乎没有影响。花序大小对繁殖成功率没有显著的影响。花位置对繁殖成功的影响在不同大小的丛中具有不同的格局,在最小的丛中,花位置对雄性和雌性繁殖成功的影响都很显著,但在最大丛中都不显著。边缘效应对少花鹤顶兰和广布小碟兰的繁殖成功有显著的影响,花粉移走率和结实率均随离栈道的距离增加而增加。在离栈道10米以内的植株受到的影响最为严重。这种影响可能是由边缘效应和在栈道上的游客共同作用下,对传粉者产生了干扰,导致传粉者的行为改变所引起的。如果这种边缘效应是一个普遍现象的话,那么在进行自然保护区设计时,应该对这种效应加以重视。
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Floral nectar spurs are widely considered to influence pollinator behaviour in orchids. Spurs of 21 orchid species selected from within four molecularly circumscribed clades of subtribe Orchidinae (based on Platanthera s.l., Gymnadenia-Dactylorhiza s.l., Anacamptis s.l., Orchis s.s.) were examined under light and scanning electron microscopes in order to estimate correlations between nectar production (categorized as absent, trace, reservoir), interior epidermal papillae (categorized as absent, short, medium, long) and epidermal cell striations (categorized as apparently absent, weak, moderate, strong). Closely related congeneric species scored similarly, but more divergent species showed less evidence of phylogenetic constraints. Nectar secretion was negatively correlated with striations and positively correlated with papillae, which were especially frequent and large in species producing substantial reservoirs of nectar. We speculate that the primary function of the papillae is conserving energy through nectar resorption and explain the presence of large papillae in a minority of deceit-pollinated species by arguing that the papillae improve pollination because they are a tactile expectation of pollinating insects. In contrast, the prominence of striations may be a 'spandrel', simply reflecting the thickness of the overlying cuticle. Developmentally, the spur is an invagination of the labellum; it is primarily vascularized by a single 'U'-shaped primary strand, with smaller strands present in some species. Several suggestions are made for developing further, more targeted research programmes. (C) 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 160, 369-387.
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Widespread reports of low pollination rates suggest a recent anthropogenic decline in pollination that could threaten natural and agricultural ecosystems. Nevertheless, unequivocal evidence for a decline in pollination over time has remained elusive because it was not possible to determine historical pollination rates. Here we demonstrate a widely applicable method for reconstructing historical pollination rates, thus allowing comparison with contemporary rates from the same sites. We focused on the relationship between the oil-collecting bee Rediviva peringueyi (Melittidae) and the guild of oil-secreting orchid species (Coryciinae) that depends on it for pollination. The guild is distributed across the highly transformed and fragmented lowlands of the Cape Region of South Africa. We show that rehydrated herbarium specimens of Pterygodium catholicum, the most abundant member of the guild, contain a record of past pollinator activity in the form of pollinarium removal rates. Analysis of a pollination time series showed a recent decline in pollination on Signal Hill, a small urban conservation area. The same herbaria contain historical species occurrence data. We analyzed this data and found that there has been a contemporaneous shift in orchid guild composition in urban areas due to the local extirpation of the non-clonal species, consistent with their greater dependence on seeds and pollination for population persistence.