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Showing posts with label Carnivorous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carnivorous. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Bugs Busters of Borneo

The nutrients-poor soil of the kerangas and peat swamp forest have driven many plants to supplement their autotrophic existence by other nutritional means. Borneo has an astonishing  variety of such plants - as I discovered during a day trip at a kerangas bordering a peat swamp forest .

Under the full glare of the sun and on persistantly wet sandy area, the sundew Drosera burmanii coexist with a population of bladderwoth Utricularia - which would almost be unnoticeable were it not for the yellow bloom.
 
The tentatcles of the Drosera burmanii are tactile and produce both a sweet fluid and a sticky glue - these attracts insects from which they then surround and entrap. The speed of movement of the tentalces in this species is one of the fastest in the genus - closing in on the prey between 5-10 seconds.  

The dimunitive nature of these plants mean that they easily be outcompete by larger, faster growing plants in richer soils so they are restricted in bright, acidic and nutrient-poor area 


The pitcher plant genus Nepenthes has the most diversity in Borneo and Philippines. Unlike the previous species, Nepenthes do not have movable parts to ensnare their prey. One of the largest lowland species Nepenthes rafflesiana shown below- demonstrate its usual modus operandi - trapping, drowning and assimilating invertebrates in its large pitchers. Note the large lid sheltering the pitcher in this photo - it serves to prevent dilution of the digestive enzymes from rain water. 

This species was actually first discovered in Singapore by Dr William Jack in 1819. 

 

Nepenthes ampullaria, on the other hand, has a tiny lid, which flips away from from the pitcher opening. This species does not catch much insects - instead it relies on leaf debris and other organic waste dropping into the pitchers and so it clearly wants the lid out of the way. Its pitchers also do not have slippery inner wall and very little nectar gland which produce insect attractants....
....the plant branches repeatedly to form a network of pitchers on the floor. This maximise the capture rate of any fallen organic matter.


The red-pitcher form is very attractive and has great horticulture value. It seems to be restricted to Borneo

The red speckled form is common throughout its range.

The Borneo endemic Nepenthes bicalcarata has a pair of downward facing fangs growing from the  the pitcher peristome.  The function of this is still a matter of debate. Although it feeds on the carpenter ants that nests in its tendrils, it also benefits from a symbiotic way since the ants are shown to provide housekeeping service by removing excess undigested organic material, thereby preventing bacterial / fungal proliferation and early demise of the pitchers.






The pitchers are medium size and the red variety is quite horticultural.
While most Nepenthes are indiscriminate when it comes to food, Nepenthes albomarginata is rather picky - specialising in trapping termites. This species has a ring of pale hairy cells around the rim of the pitchers which somehow termites cannot resist feeding. The inevitable eventually happens and the pitcher will soon be filled with termites after sacrificing some strands of hairs.


There are 2 forms - the lowland green form .....


and the attractive dark form from higher elevation.


Nepenthes mirabilis is one of the most widely distributed species and the normal form has rather unremarkable attributes although the variety echinostoma, which I could not find, has surreal and weird peristome. In my previous post I had found pitchers filled with ants.

The pictures below look very much like the lower pitchers of N. rafflesiana but I think it is the hybrid with N. ampullaria known as Nepenthes  xhookeriana

This is another hybrid, I believe Nepenthes rafflesiana x mirabilis and it appears that one of the parent is very red. Natural hybrid is very common amongst Nepenthes particularly in high diversity area like Borneo where the different species co-exist in the same area.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Morning bash at Titiwangsa mossy forest


Rising before the sun, we drove to an open barren dumping ground doubled up as a parking spot,  marched through a path bordered by tall grasses,  drove away a pack of wild dogs,  waited for the first ray before scrambling up a slope and eventually entering a cool dark mossy forest....

 The ground was soft and moist and littered with terrestrial herbs....

like Medinilla (an epiphyte on fallen branch) - M. clarkei ?

Platanthera angustata, a highland terrestrial orchid - we saw this everywhere but could not get a good flower to photograph.
  
This one I have absolutely no idea .... is the flower coming from those leaves or it that a saprophyte ?
 
This ginger with its characteristics stilt roots and erect yellow inflorescence is Geostachys densiflora. It is endemic to the Titiwangsa Range and is deemed vulnerable due to extensive developments.

   
.... its rather horticultural but alas, a cool grower.
Another cool growing ginger - Camptandra ovata
  Different types of mosses on the ground ....
Hymenophyllum - the familiar filmy ferns of the elfian forest, draping the trunks.
 
Xiphopterella hieronymusii, a fern confined to montane forests in Peninsula Malaysia and Thailand. I have seen a similar lowland species in Leyte which I should have checked the spore patterns.
Many epiphytic orchids, but only 2 flowering :This one is  Dilochia cantleyi, also confined to highlands....

The inflorescence is really stunning !
A tree trunk full of Coelogynes ....
This one appears to be C. radicosa
And the charming Rhododendron malayanum. This was first described by William Jack from specimens collected in Sumatra - as to why it turned out not to be a "sumatranum" was not known. This widespread Vireya can also be found in the lowlands. 
And this is another mystery plant at the edge of the forest, in more open space. It appears to be some kind of horsetail growing on a tree, or perhaps an aberrant Psilotum nudum - a parasite from mistletoe family (Viscaceae) has also been suggested.
Still unsure what this can be ....

Near  the edge of the forest, we met another lovely Nepenthes sanguinea ....
and its a lady !

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Oh no, not another new Nepenthes species .....

Normally I would rejoice with the news of novel species being discovered and described  but in the case of Nepenthes it sometimes makes me cringe with apprehension. My understanding of taxonomy is rudimentary but I always felt it worked well for some families, like orchids, where the floral features take precedence over vegetative ones - but become rather dicey when it comes to others, notably Nepenthes where the main distinguishing feature is that of the pitcher....

So coming back to this story - it was in the Philippines island of Samar where I spotted these large pitchers dangling on a slope overgrown with Gleichenia ....


In the simpler days, there would only be the widespread and very variable species recognised in this area - Nepenthes alata. However, since this one is bigger and "fatter" than typical alata, I would assume it could be a variant or a hybrid with another endemic, perhaps, Nepenthes merrilliana, which I knew later to be also found on this island. These natural hybrids are not uncommon amongst pitcher plants, as I had pointed out previously.





As it turned out, it was decided sometime in 2013 that N. alata should be split into more than a handful of different species and that the one in Samar should be called Nepenthes graciliflora based on the fact that its pitchers are not hairy, unlike the true alata. But that is not all - this fat and large specimen appeared to be yet another species called Nepenthes samar published on Sept 2013. If you ask me, which you shouldn't,  the line drawing reminds me of N rafflesiana...


Metres away, I also found another plant with more slender pitcher and less jagged peristone. So what is this  - another species nova ? 
Also on the same slope, I found a more conventional looking Nepenthes alata which happened to be totally green. Is it even possible to have 3 species growing on the same slope within a hundred metres apart and not expect any interbreeding?
Maybe I am just lazy but I would prefer to accept their slight differences and lump all of them under Nepenthes alata.

For those keen to dwell on the hazy art of Taxonomy, here's a link to the article describing the new species : 



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