伊甸园项目中的热带附生植物如何为雨林冠层科学做出贡献

J. Donald, P. Maxfield, D. Murray, M. Ellwood
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引用次数: 5

摘要

面对大面积的森林砍伐,了解热带雨林冠层的生态模式和生态系统过程变得越来越紧迫。然而,进入雨林冠层远非易事,在冠层中进行操纵实验尤其具有挑战性。植物园在实地实验和受控的实验室条件之间提供了一个理想的“中途之家”。作为测试设备和提炼想法的理想场所,植物园还为科学家提供了一条与公众接触的直接途径,并有可能产生研究影响。在这里,我们描述了“蕨类植物”,这是一个可调节的树冠研究平台,用于对康沃尔伊甸园项目附生燕窝蕨类植物(Asplenium nidus)进行标准化、操作和详细研究。蕨类植物馆不仅为燕巢蕨类植物的科学研究提供了一个平台,也为公众参与、科学交流和更广泛地了解围绕热带雨林的紧迫环境问题提供了一个平台。我们包括一些初步的实验结果,其中伊甸园项目蕨类土壤的微生物群落被发现在组成上与马来西亚婆罗洲低地热带雨林的蕨类相似。这项研究说明了室内雨林的初步实验如何为真正雨林冠层的科学研究提供基础的实验技术和程序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Tropical Epiphytes at the Eden Project Contribute to Rainforest Canopy Science
Understanding the ecological patterns and ecosystem processes of tropical rainforest canopies is becoming increasingly urgent in the face of widespread deforestation. However, accessing rainforest canopies is far from simple, and performing manipulative experiments in the canopy is particularly challenging. Botanic gardens provide an ideal ‘halfway house’ between field experiments and controlled laboratory conditions. As an ideal venue for testing equipment and refining ideas, botanic gardens also provide scientists with a direct route to public engagement, and potentially to research impact. Here we describe the ‘fernarium’, an adjustable canopy research platform for the standardisation, manipulation and detailed study of epiphytic bird’s nest ferns (Asplenium nidus) at the Eden Project in Cornwall. The fernarium provides a platform not only for the scientific study of bird’s nest ferns, but for public engagement, science communication and a wider understanding of the urgent environmental issues surrounding tropical rainforests. We include some preliminary results from an experiment in which the microbial community of a fern soil at the Eden Project was found to be similar in composition to that of a fern from lowland tropical rainforest in Malaysian Borneo. This study illustrates how preliminary experiments in an indoor rainforest can inform experimental techniques and procedures fundamental to the scientific study of genuine rainforest canopies.
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