Fire, frost, and drought constrain the structural diversity of wood within southern African Erica (Ericaceae)

Author:

Akinlabi F M1,Pirie M D2ORCID,Oskolski A A13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany and Plant Biotechnology, University of Johannesburg , P.O. Box 524, Auckland Park 2006, Johannesburg , South Africa

2. Department of Natural History, University Museum, University of Bergen , 5020 Bergen , Norway

3. Komarov Botanical Institute , Professor Popov street, 2, 197376 St. Petersburg , Russia

Abstract

Abstract Erica comprises ~860 species of evergreen shrubs and trees ranged from Europe to southern Africa and Madagascar. Wood structure of the around 20 European species is well studied, but despite its relevance to adaptation across the wider geographic range, it has not yet been explored across the much greater diversity, particularly of southern African lineages. In this study, we examine wood structure of 28 Erica species from southern Africa. In the African Erica clade, loss of scalariform perforation plates could be driven by increased aridity and seasonality in the mid-Miocene, and its re-gain can represent an adaptation to freezing in the high elevation species E. nubigena. As vessels in Erica are mostly solitary, imperforate tracheary elements probably form a subsidiary conduit network instead of vessel groups. Increase of ray frequency in habitats with a prominent dry and hot season probably facilitates refilling of vessels after embolism caused by water stress. Wider rays are ancestral for the lineage comprising African Erica and the Mediterranean E. australis. The negative correlation between ray width and expression of summer drought is consistent with Ojeda’s model explaining the diversification of seeders and resprouters among southern African Erica.

Funder

University of Johannesburg

Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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