New paper! Water-N relationships in mistletoes and their hosts

We’re excited that the first paper from Marina’s PhD thesis has now been accepted for publication!
Marina C. Scalon and Ian J. Wright (2015). A global analysis of water and nitrogen relationship between mistletoes and their hosts: broad-scale tests of old and enduring hypotheses. Functional Ecology (accepted). DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.12418.  [link]

Abstract

1. Mistletoes use far more water per unit carbon fixed during photosynthesis than their hosts (i.e., they have lower ‘water use efficiency’, WUE). The widely-cited “nitrogen-parasitism hypothesis” posits that N is the most limiting resource for mistletoes, and that they use their faster transpiration rates to acquire sufficient N from the host xylem. In a rather different context, the “mimicry hypothesis” arose in the literature suggesting that some mistletoes mimic the morphology of host leaves in order to deploy higher-N leaves without suffering higher levels of herbivory. These two non-exclusive hypotheses share the common goal of trying to explain patterns of mistletoe leaf N concentration.

2. We set out to test the generality of both hypotheses at broad geographic scale using data for 168 mistletoes-host pairs, from 39 sites, encompassing all continents except Antarctica. We drew together data from published literature and our own field data on two key plant functional traits, leaf N concentration (Nmass) and leaf carbon isotopic composition, δ13C (representing long-term WUE and degree of stomatal control over photosynthesis).

3. Key findings included (1) Little or no support for the N-parasitism hypothesis: differences in mistletoe and host Nmass explained only 3% variation in differences in leaf δ13C; and, mistletoe-host differences in leaf δ13C were unrelated to whether or not the hosts were N-fixers (presumed to have higher N concentration in xylem sap); (2) Partial support for the mimicry hypothesis: mimic mistletoes generally had higher Nmass when associated with N-fixing hosts (but, on non-N-fixing hosts there was no such pattern); and (3) More broadly, mistletoes showed similar trait-responses as their hosts to environmental drivers, for example, they showed similar-magnitude shifts in Nmass and δ13C in relation to site aridity.

4. Contrary to current belief, our findings suggest that nitrogen is not the limiting nutrient for mistletoes, at least not the main component driving the faster transpiration rates. Our results also give insight into the evolution of mimicry in mistletoes and show, for the first time, that mistletoes are also constrained by local water availability, exhibiting clear trait adaptations to environmental gradients. By reconsidering these issues at broad geographic scale and across a large number of species, our findings substantially modify current knowledge on the ecology and physiology of mistletoes and their hosts.

IMG_3631The modified root (haustorium) of the mistletoe Muellerina eucalyptoides penetrating the bark of its host Eucalyptus haemastoma. (photo: Marina Scalon)

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Welcome Yan-Shih!

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We’re excited to welcome postdoc Yan-Shih Lin to our group. Yan-Shih is leading a global data synthesis of Vcmax (photosynthetic carboxylation capacity) and related traits as part of the ARC Discovery Project “Next-generation vegetation model based on functional traits” (CIs: Colin Prentice & Ian Wright). [Yan-Shih’s website]
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Emma wins Rice Memorial Field Research Award

Emma Gray won the 2014 Rice Memorial Field Research Award for her talk at the annual Departmental postgrad conference, Growth‐trait strategies in contrasting vegetation types. The Rice Memorial Fund was established in 2009 and honours her memory by encouraging field research.

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Ian awarded 2015 Fenner Medal

The Australian Academy of Science has just announced the annual Honorific awards for scientific excellence. The 2015 Fenner Medal for research in biology was awarded to Ian Wright. (the Fenner Medal is a mid-career award, meaning up to 15 years post-PhD). The various 2015 AAS medals will be awarded next May as part of the 3-day “Science at the Shine Dome” event in Canberra, during which new Fellows are admitted to the Academy, prize winners and new Fellows get to give talks about their research, and a symposium is held on an issue of national importance (different each year). [MQ news item]

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Rachael gives plenary at NZES2014

Rachael Gallagher is just back from New Zealand where she gave the Young Scientist Plenary at the 2014 annual meeting of the NZ Ecological Society. Rachael spoke on “Invasive species in a changing climate“.

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“The ring of fire” — in Portugal

This week Saskia is attending the VII International Conference on Forest Fire Research (Coimbra, Portugal). She’s giving a talk about the burning experiments on Australian plant species she ran last year at the FLARE lab at Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam: “The ring of fire: the relative importance of fuel packing versus intrinsic leaf flammability” (authors, S Grootemaat, IJ Wright, JHC Cornelissen).

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Marina hands in her PhD thesis

JpegVery exciting news!! Marina Scalon has handed in her PhD thesis “Comparative Ecology and Physiology of Australian and Brazilian Mistletoe-Host Relationships”.  Congratulations Marina! Photo shows Marina (right) with Head of Dept Marie Herberstein.

A photo from Marina’s celebratory (and farewell!) dinner:

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20,000 hits!

WordPress collects usage stats for all webpages they host. Last week we clocked up an extraordinary statistic: since its inception (April 4th, 2012) our webpages have received 20,000 views!!

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Sandra Diaz visits

This week we were very lucky to be visited by Professor Sandra Diaz (U. Cordoba, Argentina). Sandra and Ian spent some very productive time working on a manuscript describing analyses of global trait variation derived from the TRY database.

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Wright Lab at ESA2014 – Alice Springs

DSC_0289Three of us (Emma, Raquel, Ian) will make it to the annual conference of the Ecological Society of Australia — to be held this year surrounded by beautiful desert on the outskirts of Alice Springs. Both Ian and Emma will be giving talks about our recent work on functional traits as drivers of field growth rates:

– Emma Gray. “Assimilation and allocation: explaining variation in plant growth rates using functional traits”. 3pm Thursday 2nd October (Plant Ecology open session 1).

– Ian Wright. “Plant functional traits and biomass allocation drive field growth rates in a NT savanna”. 5pm Thursday 2nd October (symposium: “Water, nutrient and carbon fluxes in Tropical savannas: from plots to ecosystems”).

Looks like there’ll be lots of great talks at the conference! The full program is here

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