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Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest

Bryophytes are able to intercept atmospheric water over the entire surface of their shoot and, once intercepted, this water forms a vital part of the hydrological cycle of their surrounding ecosystems. To investigate the role of bryophytes in the hydrological cycle, our study, conducted in the biodi...

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Main Author: Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
Other Authors: Hedderson, Terry A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
author2 Hedderson, Terry A
author_browse Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
Hedderson, Terry A
author_facet Hedderson, Terry A
Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
author_sort Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
collection Thesis
description Bryophytes are able to intercept atmospheric water over the entire surface of their shoot and, once intercepted, this water forms a vital part of the hydrological cycle of their surrounding ecosystems. To investigate the role of bryophytes in the hydrological cycle, our study, conducted in the biodiversity hotspot of the tropical montane cloud forest of La Réunion, focused on two leafy liverwort species, Mastigophora diclados and Bazzania decrescens. We evaluated liverwort biomass, water storage capacity, atmospheric or cloud water interception, and photosynthetic response to desiccation. We found that B. decrescens stored approximately double the mean and maximum litres of water per hectare despite occupying less than half the volume of M. diclados. Despite this decreased water storage capacity, we found that M. diclados had a greater ability to intercept atmospheric moisture than B. decrescens, which had similar interception ability to the control. These interception abilities affected water flux in the two liverwort species. We found that this variation in water flux had an effect on photosynthesis. Both species displayed a significant relationship between photosynthesis and water content. We found that both species showed a loss of photosynthesis at very low and very high water contents with the optimal water content for photosynthesis corresponding to the in situ water content of the liverworts. The abundance of both species and their cloud water interception ability together with the wide range of photosynthetic tolerance of M. diclados and the large water storage capacity and slow desiccation rate of B. decrescens make both liverwort species ecologically important in the forest's hydrological cycle. Anthropogenic climate change threatens this ecosystem as the cloud that these species are so dependent on is predicted to lift. Our findings tie the liverworts very closely to their environment and therefore show support for the idea that bryophytes are excellent early warning signals for predicted climate changes.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:45.765Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24394 Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson Hedderson, Terry A Ah-Peng, Claudine Flores, Olivier West, Adam Botany Bryophytes are able to intercept atmospheric water over the entire surface of their shoot and, once intercepted, this water forms a vital part of the hydrological cycle of their surrounding ecosystems. To investigate the role of bryophytes in the hydrological cycle, our study, conducted in the biodiversity hotspot of the tropical montane cloud forest of La Réunion, focused on two leafy liverwort species, Mastigophora diclados and Bazzania decrescens. We evaluated liverwort biomass, water storage capacity, atmospheric or cloud water interception, and photosynthetic response to desiccation. We found that B. decrescens stored approximately double the mean and maximum litres of water per hectare despite occupying less than half the volume of M. diclados. Despite this decreased water storage capacity, we found that M. diclados had a greater ability to intercept atmospheric moisture than B. decrescens, which had similar interception ability to the control. These interception abilities affected water flux in the two liverwort species. We found that this variation in water flux had an effect on photosynthesis. Both species displayed a significant relationship between photosynthesis and water content. We found that both species showed a loss of photosynthesis at very low and very high water contents with the optimal water content for photosynthesis corresponding to the in situ water content of the liverworts. The abundance of both species and their cloud water interception ability together with the wide range of photosynthetic tolerance of M. diclados and the large water storage capacity and slow desiccation rate of B. decrescens make both liverwort species ecologically important in the forest's hydrological cycle. Anthropogenic climate change threatens this ecosystem as the cloud that these species are so dependent on is predicted to lift. Our findings tie the liverworts very closely to their environment and therefore show support for the idea that bryophytes are excellent early warning signals for predicted climate changes. 2017-05-24T07:08:46Z 2017-05-24T07:08:46Z 2012 Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24394 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Cardoso, Anabelle Williamson
Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
title_full Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
title_fullStr Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
title_full_unstemmed Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
title_short Bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications : A case study of La Réunion cloud forest
title_sort bryophytes in the hydrological cycle and climate change implications a case study of la reunion cloud forest
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24394
work_keys_str_mv AT cardosoanabellewilliamson bryophytesinthehydrologicalcycleandclimatechangeimplicationsacasestudyoflareunioncloudforest