Australia lacks stem succulents but is it depauperate in plants with crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM)?

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Holtum, Joseph A.M.;Hancock, Lillian P.;Edwards, Erika J.;Crisp, Michael D.;Crayn, Darren M.;Sage, Rowan;Winter, Klaus
Abstract

In the flora of Australia, the driest vegetated continent, crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), the most water-use efficient form of photosynthesis, is documented in only 0.6% of native species. Most are epiphytes and only seven terrestrial. However, much of Australia is unsurveyed, and carbon isotope signature, commonly used to assess photosynthetic pathway diversity, does not distinguish between plants with low-levels of CAM and C3 plants. We provide the first census of CAM for the Australian flora and suggest that the real frequency of CAM in the flora is double that currently known, with the number of terrestrial CAM species probably 10-fold greater. Still unresolved is the question why the large stem-succulent life — form is absent from the native Australian flora even though exotic large cacti have successfully invaded and established in Australia.

Journal

Current Opinion in Plant Biology

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31

ISBN/ISSN

1879-0356

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Pages Count

9

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Publisher

Elsevier

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1016/j.pbi.2016.03.018