Age-growth relationships, temperature sensitivity and palaeoclimate-archive potential of the threatened Altiplano cactus Echinopsis atacamensis
Isotopes in spines of the giant pasacana cactus on the Bolivian Altiplano provide important ecophysiological information for management of this foundation species and record climate information related to Altiplano temperatures and cactus demography. Abstract The tall (>4 m), charismatic and thre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Conservation physiology 2021, Vol.9 (1), p.coaa123 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Isotopes in spines of the giant pasacana cactus on the Bolivian Altiplano provide important ecophysiological information for management of this foundation species and record climate information related to Altiplano temperatures and cactus demography.
Abstract
The tall (>4 m), charismatic and threatened columnar cacti, pasacana [Echinopsis atacamensis (Vaupel) Friedrich & G.D. Rowley)], grows on the Bolivian Altiplano and provides environmental and economic value to these extremely cold, arid and high-elevation (~4000 m) ecosystems. Yet very little is known about their growth rates, ages, demography and climate sensitivity. Using radiocarbon in spine dating time series, we quantitatively estimate the growth rate (5.8 and 8.3 cm yr−1) and age of these cacti (up to 430 years). These data and our field measurements yield a survivorship curve that suggests precipitation on the Altiplano is important for this species’ recruitment. Our results also reveal a relationship between night-time temperatures on the Altiplano and the variation in oxygen isotope values in spines (δ18O). The annual δ18O minimums from 58 years of in-series spine tissue from pasacana on the Altiplano provides at least decadal proxy records of temperature (r = 0.58; P |
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ISSN: | 2051-1434 2051-1434 |
DOI: | 10.1093/conphys/coaa123 |