Abstract

BackgroundCacti establish mostly occurs under the canopy of nurse plants which provide a less stressful micro-environment, although mechanisms underlying this process are unknown. The impact of the combination of light and watering treatments on Opuntia streptacantha (Cactaceae) seedlings was examined.Methods/Principal FindingsEcophysiological [titratable acidity, osmotic potential (‘solute potential’, Ψs), relative growth rate (RGR) and their components (NAR, SLA, and LWR)], anatomical (chloroplast density, chloroplast frequency, and cell area), and environmental [photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) and air temperature] sets of variables were analyzed, assessing relationships between them and measuring the intensity of the relationships. Three harvests were carried out at days 15, 30, and 45. Ψs and acidity content were the most important responses for seedling establishment. The main anatomical and environmental variables were chloroplast density and water availability, respectively. Opuntia streptacantha seedlings establish better in the shade-watering treatment, due to higher Ψs and acidity, unaffected chloroplasts, and lower PPFD. In addition, the chloroplasts of cells under high-light and non-watering treatment were clumped closer to the center of the cytosol than those under shade-drought, to avoid photoinhibition and/or to better distribute or utilize the penetrating light in the green plant tissue.Conclusions Opuntia seedlings grow better under the shade, although they can tolerate drought in open spaces by increasing and moving chloroplasts and avoiding drastic decreases in their Ψs. This tolerance could have important implications for predicting the impact of climate change on natural desert regeneration, as well as for planning reforestation-afforestation practices, and rural land uses.

Highlights

  • Plant recruitment in arid environments often occurs only in years with above average rainfall or in safe sites under the canopy of nurse plants that provide shelter from high temperatures and low moisture

  • Photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) The photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) is a measurement unit that expresses the light quantum in photons of solar energy related to photosynthesis

  • The lowest relative growth rate (RGR) was found under combined drought and both high- and low- solar radiation treatments at days 15, 30 and 45

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Summary

Introduction

Plant recruitment in arid environments often occurs only in years with above average rainfall or in safe sites under the canopy of nurse plants that provide shelter from high temperatures and low moisture. Cactus plants generally exhibit CAM-photosynthesis, in which CO2 exchange occurs at night when the water vapor pressure difference between the air and the transpiring surfaces is lowest, resulting in high water-use efficiency in adult plants [5] but not necessarily during seedling stages and when water from rainfall is plentiful [6,7]. GallardoVasquez and De la Barrera (2007) [12] found that nocturnal acid accumulation decreases for light - exposed cactus seedlings but increases for those shaded, regardless of their water treatment. The impact of the combination of light and watering treatments on Opuntia streptacantha (Cactaceae) seedlings was examined

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