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The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)

The δ N-15 natural abundance method was used to investigate the role of nutrient-poor habitats in carnivorous Drosera capensis and Drosera aliciae, and how that role changes under sunny and shady environmental conditions. The main purpose of the study was to evaluate Givnish's (1984) cost/benefit mo...

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Main Author: Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
Other Authors: Midgley, Jeremy J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
author2 Midgley, Jeremy J
author_browse Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
Midgley, Jeremy J
author_facet Midgley, Jeremy J
Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
author_sort Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
collection Thesis
description The δ N-15 natural abundance method was used to investigate the role of nutrient-poor habitats in carnivorous Drosera capensis and Drosera aliciae, and how that role changes under sunny and shady environmental conditions. The main purpose of the study was to evaluate Givnish's (1984) cost/benefit model used to explain the evolution of carnivory in nutrient-poor, sunny and moist habitats. δ N-15and total nitrogen values of the Drosera species were compared against each other, as well as against the non-carnivorous reference plants collected from each of the two habitats. Generally, data indicated significant differences between the carnivorous plants and their reference plants in terms of δ N-15 values. However, there was no significant difference between plants collected from the shade and those collected from the sun for both Drosera species. Total nitrogen results revealed higher values for Drosera plants from Camp's Bay than those from Table Mountain did. This indicated that there was a bigger source of insect nitrogen at that site, meaning more insects were available and being caught by the plants at Camp's Bay. Further investigations were performed on the two Drosera species in order to find the influence of altitude, leaf-size and plant form, on the degree of carnivory. There was an overall, higher degree of carnivory at Camp's Bay where it is, seasonally wet and the plants have longer leaves and a stem-like rosette. On Table Mountain it is cooler, waterlogged, and the plants have short leaves and ground-level rosettes therefore, the degree of carnivory there was lower. Lastly, chlorophyll and anthocyanin contents were measured and compared between the sun and shade collected D. capensis plants, with tentacles intact and with them removed. Chlorophyll investigations showed significant differences between sun and shade collected D. capensis plants but these were not affected by the removal of tentacles. Alternatively, anthocyanin measurements indicated that sun and shade collected D. capensis plants have similar amounts of anthocyanins, but the removal of tentacles results in a decrease (about four times lower) in the anthocyanin content.
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language eng
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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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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25617 The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.) Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle Midgley, Jeremy J Stock, WD Botany The δ N-15 natural abundance method was used to investigate the role of nutrient-poor habitats in carnivorous Drosera capensis and Drosera aliciae, and how that role changes under sunny and shady environmental conditions. The main purpose of the study was to evaluate Givnish's (1984) cost/benefit model used to explain the evolution of carnivory in nutrient-poor, sunny and moist habitats. δ N-15and total nitrogen values of the Drosera species were compared against each other, as well as against the non-carnivorous reference plants collected from each of the two habitats. Generally, data indicated significant differences between the carnivorous plants and their reference plants in terms of δ N-15 values. However, there was no significant difference between plants collected from the shade and those collected from the sun for both Drosera species. Total nitrogen results revealed higher values for Drosera plants from Camp's Bay than those from Table Mountain did. This indicated that there was a bigger source of insect nitrogen at that site, meaning more insects were available and being caught by the plants at Camp's Bay. Further investigations were performed on the two Drosera species in order to find the influence of altitude, leaf-size and plant form, on the degree of carnivory. There was an overall, higher degree of carnivory at Camp's Bay where it is, seasonally wet and the plants have longer leaves and a stem-like rosette. On Table Mountain it is cooler, waterlogged, and the plants have short leaves and ground-level rosettes therefore, the degree of carnivory there was lower. Lastly, chlorophyll and anthocyanin contents were measured and compared between the sun and shade collected D. capensis plants, with tentacles intact and with them removed. Chlorophyll investigations showed significant differences between sun and shade collected D. capensis plants but these were not affected by the removal of tentacles. Alternatively, anthocyanin measurements indicated that sun and shade collected D. capensis plants have similar amounts of anthocyanins, but the removal of tentacles results in a decrease (about four times lower) in the anthocyanin content. 2017-10-12T08:30:59Z 2017-10-12T08:30:59Z 1999 2017-02-07T12:17:54Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25617 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Botany
Mgidi, Theresa Nobuhle
The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
title_full The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
title_fullStr The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
title_full_unstemmed The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
title_short The effects of size and habitat on δ N-15 of carnivorous plants (Drosera spp.)
title_sort effects of size and habitat on δ n 15 of carnivorous plants drosera spp
topic Botany
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25617
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