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Do secondary hemiepiphytes exist?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 October 2021

Gerhard Zotz*
Affiliation:
Carl von Ossietzky University, Institute of Biology and Environmental Sciences, Functional Ecology Group, Box 2503, D-26111 Oldenburg, Germany Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Box 0843-03092, Panama, Republic of Panama
Frank Almeda
Affiliation:
California Academy of Sciences, Institute for Biodiversity Science and Sustainability, 55 Music Concourse Drive, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California94118, USA
Salvador Arias
Affiliation:
Botanical Garden, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México City04510, México
Barry Hammel
Affiliation:
Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Blvd., St. Louis, MO63110, USA
Emerson Pansarin
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, Faculty of Philosophy, Sciences and Literature of Ribeirão Preto, University of São Paulo, Av. Bandeirantes 3900, Ribeirão Preto, SP14040-901, Brazil
*
Author for correspondence: Gerhard Zotz, Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

For decades, tropical ecologists distinguished primary (PH) and secondary hemiepiphytes (SH) as two structurally dependent life forms with an epiphytic phase at, respectively, the beginning or the end of their ontogeny. However, the use of these terms has been criticized repeatedly because the term “hemiepiphyte” suggests an unsubstantiated biological similarity in ontogeny, and worse, because it is often used without a qualifier, which makes unambiguous interpretation of the life history of such species impossible. In this paper, we go one step further and ask the question whether an ontogenetic trajectory as described by the term “secondary hemiepiphyte” does exist at all. We show that until now all evidence available for the three families that were traditionally listed as taxa with SHs (Araceae, Cyclanthaceae, Marcgraviaceae) falsifies such claims, but critically discuss reports of possible SHs in other families. In all these cases unambiguous conclusions about the existence of any SH are difficult, but our detailed discussion of potential candidates is meant to provide the basis for focused field studies. Irrespective of the outcome of these studies, we urge researchers to abandon the use of the term SH for the time being: Terminological issues can be discussed once there are data.

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

The tropics are well-known for their impressive diversity of plant species, but they are also outstanding globally in regard to the diversity of different life forms. Confronted with this hitherto unknown diversity prompted early explorers from the northern hemisphere (e.g. Schimper Reference Schimper1888; Schimper Reference Schimper1903; Went Reference Went1895) to come up with schemes to categorize the diversity of free-standing or mechanically dependent flora: Went (Reference Went1895) separated hemiepiphytes from epiphytes because the former – after germination on other plants - produce feeder roots that connect the plant with the ground, representing a fundamental change in access to resources like water and nutrients. This may lead to structural independence as, e.g., in strangling figs, although a final freestanding stage is not typical for the bulk of hemiepiphytes (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Almeda, Bautista-Bello, Eskov, Giraldo-Cañas, Hammel, Harrison, Köster, Krömer, Lowry, Moran, Plunkett and Weichgrebe2021a). Schimper (Reference Schimper1903) acknowledged another group, “pseudoepiphytes”, i.e. plants that germinate on the ground, climb up a host tree with successive dieback of the proximal stem portion (for a detailed account of historical changes in terminology see Zotz Reference Zotz2013). At least since the mid-1980s the generally accepted terminology changed with the term primary hemiepiphytes (PH) being used for Went´s “hemiepiphytes” and secondary hemiepiphytes (SH) for Schimper´s “pseudoepiphytes” (Kress Reference Kress1986; Putz & Holbrook Reference Putz and Holbrook1986) – (note that the two terms had been introduced much earlier by Ellenberg & Mueller-Dombois Reference Ellenberg and Mueller-Dombois1965).

While we are not aware of any debate neither on the term “(primary) hemiepiphyte” nor on the general biology of the plants in this group, the term “secondary hemiepiphyte”, and the underlying concept, have been debated for decades. Curiously, the two authors who may have popularized the term SH more than anyone else, partly revoked their classification in a later publication (Holbrook & Putz Reference Holbrook, Putz, Mulkey, Chazdon and Smith1996), arguing that SHs are basically vine-like in physiology and morphology. Not much later, Lüttge (Reference Lüttge1997) argued against the use of SH because “hemiepiphytic” aroids in genera like Monstera or Philodendron maintain soil contact via adventitious roots, although he did not present any data to back up this claim. Moffett (Reference Moffett2000) expressed similar reservations in his excellent treatise of the terms used in canopy biology. He noted that this dual usage of hemiepiphyte confounds two vastly different life cycle strategies. Zotz (Reference Zotz2013) was the last to argue against the use of SH supporting Moffett´s suggestion to use the term “nomadic vine” for any climbing plant that germinates on or near the ground and may lose the proximal portion of its stem during ontogeny. Remarkably, none of these authors discussed a much more fundamental doubt. Why should a plant that starts life with a connection to the ground give up this connection entirely and sacrifice access to the soil as a large reservoir of water and nutrients in the first place? A much more parsimonious explanation for the dieback of the lower stem portion, e.g. in some climbing aroids, is not a transition to an assumed “epiphytic” phase but is rather a hydraulic strategy related to the fact that almost all reported so-called SH are monocotyledons. These lack secondary growth, and the use of adventitious roots may be the only option to allow sufficient long-distance flow to an increasing larger shoot, making the lower portion of the stem expendable (López-Portillo et al. Reference López-Portillo, Ewers, Angeles and Fisher2000).

Several authors also noted the semantic problem that a single term is used for ecologically distinct plants, particularly relevant when descriptions in publications do not use a qualifier (Sperotto et al. Reference Sperotto, Acevedo-Rodríguez, Vasconcelos and Roque2020). This is the case in numerous studies (e.g. Barbosa et al. Reference Barbosa, Basílio, Furtado and Neto2020; Fernández-Alonso & Hernández-Schmidt Reference Fernández-Alonso and Hernández-Schmidt2007; Mucunguzi Reference Mucunguzi2007; Weigand et al. Reference Weigand, Abrahamczyk, Aubin, Bita-Nicolae, Bruelheide, Carvajal-Hernandez, Cicuzza, da Costa, Csiky, Dengler, de Gasper, Guerin, Haider, Hernandez-Rojas, Jandt, Reyes-Chavez, Karger, Khine, Kluge, Kromer, Lehnert, Lenoir, Moulatlet, Aros-Mualin, Noben, Olivares, Quintanilla, Reich, Salazar, Silva-Mijangos, Tuomisto, Weigelt, Zuquim, Kreft and Kessler2020). Since these studies also lack any definition of the term “hemiepiphyte”, an unambiguous interpretation is impossible. For these reasons, Moffett (Reference Moffett2000) proposed to abandon the term “secondary hemiepiphytes” and use the term “nomadic vine” instead. That term reflects the vine habit of these plants without making strict assumption on the site of germination and on rooting strategies. This rather vague circumscription highlights an issue that is much more important than semantics: there is a lack of good field data on the biology of these structurally dependent plants, with a real possibility that plants with the ontogeny associated with the term SH do not exist at all.

Kress (Reference Kress1986) defined SH by the following ontogenetic stages (Fig. 1): (1) germination on the ground; (2) ascent on a tree; (3) dieback of the older stem and severance of all (!) connections with the ground. The third requirement is particularly relevant, because otherwise these plants are simply vines: long-distance water transport is at least as effective in roots as in shoots (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Patiño and Tyree1997). In this context It is noteworthy that there are data for Heteropsis spp. (Araceae), which are typically called SHs: individual plants invariably die when their aerial roots are removed in commercial harvesting (Balcázar Vargas & van Andel Reference Balcázar Vargas and van Andel2005).

Fig. 1. Ontogeny of a secondary hemiepiphyte (SH) vs. a nomadic vine (NV). Both SH and NV germinate terrestrially and grow towards a tree (1) where they start to climb up (2). Both show dieback of their proximal stem portion, but while a (hypothetical) SH severs all its connections with the ground to become epiphytic (hence the name, 3a), a NV maintains a continuous connection with the soil via adventitious roots (3b).

Two recent studies have further challenged the use of the term SH for members of this family. Zotz et al. (Reference Zotz, Bautista-Bello, Kohlstruck and Weichgrebe2020) investigated a community of climbing aroids in the lowland forest of Barro Colorado Island, Panama. They found that no species followed the ontogenetic trajectory of a SH. Species typically called SH and species typically called climber or vine (Croat Reference Croat1978) differed by degree only as far as the proximal dieback of the stem was concerned, but invariably maintained connections to the soil via adventitious roots. Very similar results are reported by Bautista-Bello et al. (Reference Bautista-Bello, Krömer, Acebey, Weichgrebe and Zotz2021) who studied aroids in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. Thus, we are currently not aware of any evidence that plants that fulfil the definition of SHs exist in Araceae. In contrast, there is increasing evidence that there are numerous species in the genera Anthurium and Philodendron with an epiphytic start that later establish root connections, i.e. species that qualify as (primary) hemiepiphytes (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Almeda, Bautista-Bello, Eskov, Giraldo-Cañas, Hammel, Harrison, Köster, Krömer, Lowry, Moran, Plunkett and Weichgrebe2021a, see also Meyer and Zotz Reference Meyer and Zotz2004).

Reviews on PHs and SHs (Gentry & Dodson Reference Gentry and Dodson1987; Putz & Holbrook Reference Putz and Holbrook1986; Williams-Linera & Lawton Reference Williams-Linera, Lawton, Lowman and Nadkarni1995) listed two additional plant families with SHs, Cyclanthaceae and Marcgraviacae. Unfortunately, these reviews did not cite the primary literature to back up their claim. There are a substantial number of epiphytic taxa in Cyclanthaceae (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Weigelt, Kessler, Kreft and Taylor2021b), but all claims of (secondary) hemiepiphytic occurrences (e.g. Irume et al. Reference Irume, de Lourdes da Costa Soares Morais, Zartman and do Amaral2013; Leal & Forzza Reference Leal and Forzza2012) are unsubstantiated. Similar to the situation in Araceae, there are some observations that suggest a potential for (primary) hemiepiphytic growth, e.g. more or less baccate fruits with small seeds, the observation of at least occasional epiphytic germination (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Almeda, Bautista-Bello, Eskov, Giraldo-Cañas, Hammel, Harrison, Köster, Krömer, Lowry, Moran, Plunkett and Weichgrebe2021a), the copious production of adventitious roots. Detailed field observations are needed to document the ontogeny of these species. There is good experimental evidence for at least one species of Marcgraviaceae (Marcgravia serrae), which, however, again does not support the classification as SH, but provides clear evidence for the life history of a (primary) hemiepiphyte (Massa Reference Massa1996)! Numerous field observations of Diego Giraldo-Cañas (pers. comm.) suggest that this is also true for other Marcgraviaceae, i.e. that there are no SHs in this family (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Almeda, Bautista-Bello, Eskov, Giraldo-Cañas, Hammel, Harrison, Köster, Krömer, Lowry, Moran, Plunkett and Weichgrebe2021a). Thus, we are currently not aware of evidence that there are SHs in any of the three families that previous reviews had identified as having SHs (Araceae, Cyclanthaceae and Marcgraviaceae), although field data are still too scarce as to rule out the possibility.

However, although not listed in any of the three mentioned reviews there are species of at least four other families that have sometimes been called SHs, i.e. members of the families Acanthaceae, Cactaceae, Melastomataceae, and Orchidaceae. Systematic observations are scarce and unambiguous experimental evidence absent, so more rigorous investigations are needed to determine whether plants that fulfil Kress´ (Reference Kress1986) definition of SHs do exist in these groups. To facilitate such research efforts, we summarize in the following the relevant information for each family with promising taxa for further study.

Acanthaceae – As a first case, Cheek (Reference Cheek1995) describes observations on several species of Dischistocalyx (Acanthaceae) from Mt. Cameroon that suggest the ontogenetic trajectory of a SH. Unfortunately, it is not entirely clear from his sketchy account whether these plants really sever all connections or whether the loss of the climbing stem is compensated by adventitious roots that reach the ground.

Cactaceae – This family includes between 1450 and 1870 species, with approximately 130 recognized in the broad sense as “epiphytes” (Barthlott et al. Reference Barthlott, Burstedde, Geffert, Ibisch, Korotkova, Miebach, Rafiqpoor, Stein and Mutke2015; Hunt et al. Reference Hunt, Taylor and Charles2006), which are found in at least five different evolutionary lines in the Americas.

While there are both epiphytic and lithophytic Rhipsalideae (Hatiora, Lepismium, Rhipsalidopsis, Rhipsalis, Schlumbergera) (Hunt et al. Reference Hunt, Taylor and Charles2006; Korotkova et al. Reference Korotkova, Borsch, Quandt, Taylor, Müller and Barthlott2011), there is no claim of hemiepiphytic taxa in this species-rich clade. In contrast, apart from Acanthocereus, all genera of Hylocereeae [or Phyllocacteae, Hylocereinae] have developed a tendency to climb and have been described as epiphytes, lithophytes, or climbers (Anderson Reference Anderson2001; Hunt et al. Reference Hunt, Taylor and Charles2006), but more recently also as facultative epiphytes or SHs (Calvente et al. Reference Calvente, Zappi, Forest and Lohmann2011; Martínez-Quezada et al. Reference Martínez-Quezada, Arias, Korotkova and Terrazas2020). Unfortunately, we are not aware of any study that has demonstrated that the site of germination is the soil and that there are no adventitious roots that retain some connection of these plants with the ground when there is partial dieback of the shoot. Similarly unclear is the situation in pitahaya and allies (Selenicereus, including Hylocereus, Anderson Reference Anderson2001; Ortiz-Hernández et al. Reference Ortiz-Hernández, Carrillo-Salazar and Livera-Muñoz2012)(Figs. S1, S2). Particularly good candidates that possibly follow the scheme described by the term SH are found in the genus Aporocactus: these species start on the ground, but also on rocks, or the lower parts of trees but the base of their main stem usually dies and degrades (Figs. S3, S4). Whether soil contact is really severed permanently is unclear.

The term hemiepiphyte is quite frequently used in studies with cacti, but without detailed field studies it remains an open question whether this label is appropriate. Currently, conclusive evidence is lacking. Even the occasional observation of an individual without any connection to the ground does not indicate that this is the typical ontogenetic pattern, but may rather be an example of resilience. The polymorphic Pereskia aculeata is a case in point. This species has a wide ecological amplitude in South America (from dunes, dry forests to mesophytic forests, Leuenberger Reference Leuenberger1986), it germinates on the ground and climbs easily into the canopy, supported by the twisting of the flexible and slender stems, which can extend up to 10 m in length. When the ground connection is accidentally lost, the adventitious roots, the succulent leaves, and water-saving Crassculacean acid metabolism temporarily allow survival until a root connection is re-established.

Melastomataceae – Of the approximately 400 species of this family that have been described as “epiphytes” (Zotz et al. Reference Zotz, Almeda, Bautista-Bello, Eskov, Giraldo-Cañas, Hammel, Harrison, Köster, Krömer, Lowry, Moran, Plunkett and Weichgrebe2021a), most species in genera like Adelobotrys, Catanthera, Gravesia, Heteroblemma, Kendrickia, Macrolenes, and Preussiella may rather be nomadic vines that germinate terrestrially and retain some connection with the ground via adventitious roots. Others may qualify as SH: the climbers in the genus Pleiochiton are described as epiphytes with no connection to the ground (Reginato et al. Reference Reginato, Andrade Baumgratz and Goldenberg2013). However, in the same publication these authors note that roots of P. blepharodes do reach the ground. Unfortunately, herbarium specimen labels and species protologues do not provide the needed information to resolve such contradictions. The 18 species of Gravesia section Scandentes in Madagascar that are climbers with adventitious roots are also in need of additional field observations. Gravesia thymoides can sometimes be found with no apparent ground connection (Almeda, pers. obs.). This species stands out in the genus, because its leaves are distinctly succulent, one of the few species in the family with this characteristic. Careful observations are needed to document the ontogeny of this and other climbing species in the family, e.g. Medinilla and allied genera (Catanthera, Heteroblemma, and Kendrickia). In summary, life form categorization of Melastomes is often difficult, clear evidence for SHs in this family is missing.

Orchidaceae – apart from a few truly epiphytic species (e.g. Vanilla palmarum, Barberena et al. Reference Barberena, Sousa, Ambrosio-Moreira and Roque2019) and a self-supporting terrestrial (Pansarin Reference Pansarin2010), members of this genus are usually climbing plants. These are often described as “hemiepiphytes” (without qualifier) (e.g. Damian & Mitidieri Reference Damian and Mitidieri2020; Pansarin & Miranda Reference Pansarin and Miranda2016), but also as “secondary hemiepiphytes” (Rodrigues da Cruz & Nunes-Freitas Reference Rodrigues da Cruz and Nunes-Freitas2019), “hemiepiphytic vines” (Gigant et al. Reference Gigant, Bory, Grisoni, Besse, Grillo and Venora2011), “epiphytic vines” (Croat Reference Croat1978), or “vines” (Stern & Judd Reference Stern and Judd1999). In spite of the use of these different terms, substantial field observations indicate that all of these species germinate in the soil and climb up on a phorophyte (Pansarin, pers. obs., Fig. S5). Vanilla species typically have two types of roots, i.e. aerial or clasping roots, and feeder roots that enter the soil (Fig. S6). Aerial clasping roots are thin and velamentous, while the terrestrial roots are thick with absorbing hairs in the maturation zone. In some vanilla species (e.g. V. parvifolia group, V. aphylla), the velamentous aerial roots are short with determinate growth (Fig. S7). In these species, plants can die when the connection with the soil is lost. Members of other groups, such as species of the Vanilla planifolia group, have clasping aerial roots with undetermined growth. These aerial roots can reach the soil (Fig. S8) and function as absorbing roots (Fig. S9). When Vanilla plants are cultivated without a host tree, free aerial roots are produced that can establish secondary contact with the soil (Fig. S10).

In the majority of climbing vanillas, the stem remains connected to the soil for of the entire life span of the plant. However, in some species, such as in Vanilla pompona var. grandiflora, adult plants may lose the stem connection with the soil but plants stay connected by its roots. Taken together, current knowledge suggests that calling climbing Vanilla species (secondary) hemiepiphytes is incorrect, but some species do have the ability to survive severance of the connection with the soil at least temporarily.

Finally, there is also a recent report claiming that a bromeliad, Billbergia euphemiae, is a “secondary” hemiepiphyte (Zorger et al. Reference Zorger, Arrivabene and Milanez2019). This species, however, is well-known for its facultative terrestrial, lithophytic and epiphytic growth (Brazilian Flora Reference Brazilian2020 in construction continuously updated). It features long stolons between individual rosettes, and may sometimes climb up a tree trunk in dry resting vegetation, and may or may not sever the connection to the remaining genet. We see the report by Zorger et al. (Reference Zorger, Arrivabene and Milanez2019) as evidence for facultative epiphytism of an herb with clonal reproduction rather than the first demonstration of “secondary” hemiepiphytism in the family Bromeliaceae. Irrespective of different interpretations in this particular case, such observations highlight that our list of potential candidates is certainly not complete, take, e.g., possibly “hemiepiphytic” Gesneriaceae (Salinas et al. Reference Salinas, Arroyo and Armesto2010) or Begoniaceae (Webster & Rhode Reference Webster and Rhode2001).

In conclusion, accumulating evidence unanimously contradicts the claim that there are plants that follow the ontogenetic pattern that defines a SH in any group that traditionally were associated with such a life cycle, i.e. Araceae, Cyclanthaceae, and Marcgraviaceae. However, we describe some observations that there may be plant species that follow the ontogenetic trajectory of SHs, with the most promising candidates in Cactaceae. For decades, we have applied neat labels of life form categories without testing our concepts with rigorously collected field data. This paper is intended to stimulate much needed research in structurally dependent plants in an effort to understand their biology. It is also a plea to avoid mixing observations with conjecture. Terminology that only biases our observations, but does not stimulate critical observation and experiments, has little heuristic value. Given the current uncertainty, we advocate – for the time being – to discontinue the use of SH as a label for a particular life form and the use of neutral terms like “nomadic vine” or “adpressed climber” for any plant that germinates on the ground and subsequently climbs up trees losing its proximal stem portion. Once we have a better understanding of the different facets of life cycles of structurally dependent plants (ideally studying epiphytes, hemiepiphytes, nomadic vines, climbers, and mistletoes together), there will be time to develop an appropriate terminological framework, but only if necessary. For the reasons outlined above, SH is not a good option.

Acknowledgements

GZ acknowledges funding for past and ongoing field work from the DFG (ZO 94/10-1) and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, which was instrumental in forming the ideas expressed in this paper. ERP thanks to São Paulo Research Foundation – FAPESP (Grant 2018/07357-5) and by CNPq (Productivity Research Grant 301773/2019-0) for financial support.

Competing Interests

The authors declare none.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266467421000407

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Ontogeny of a secondary hemiepiphyte (SH) vs. a nomadic vine (NV). Both SH and NV germinate terrestrially and grow towards a tree (1) where they start to climb up (2). Both show dieback of their proximal stem portion, but while a (hypothetical) SH severs all its connections with the ground to become epiphytic (hence the name, 3a), a NV maintains a continuous connection with the soil via adventitious roots (3b).

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