<- Dejean & Olmsted 1997 (Article) Aechmea, Mexico, Epiphyte

Ecological studies on Aechmea bracteata (Swartz) (Bromeliaceae)

Author(s):A. Dejean & I. Olmsted

Publication:Journal of Natural History 31: 1313-1334. (1997) — DOI

Abstract:—In the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico, Aechmea bracteata is more frequent in the low inundated forest than in hummocks or the semi-evergreen forest. Due to its flat smooth, ovoid seeds disseminated by birds, this epiphyte generally develops on rough-barked trees at the point where a large branch forks out. The presence of a rhizome permits the formation of groups of ramets comprising different levels of development from young shoots to blossoms and the differential rotting of dead dry ramets. In green mature ramets, an amphora-shaped leaf develops around the inflorescence, delimiting a central watertight cavity. Around this central cavity, inter-leaf spaces correspond to peripheral cavities where rainwater may accumulate. This structure permits the plant to be both a phytotelm and a myrmecophytic epiphyte, with green ramets sheltering a large diversity of both aquatic (mostly Diptera larvae) and terrestrial animals (mostly ants, cockroaches, mites, and springtails). Concerning ants, peripheral cavities sheltered small Myrmicinae (31·3% of the ramets), central cavities Pachycondyla villosa (Ponerinae) or Dolichoderus bispinosus (Dolichoderinae) (91·9%; N = 248). Rotting dry ramets sheltered only terrestrial animals, mostly detritivores which are classically present in the leaf litter and ants such as Cyphomyrmex minutus, a primitive Attini and numerous Ponerinae, predators of the detritivores. Both green and dry ramets constituted good shelters for incipient colonies.

Keywords:—Aechmea bracteata, Bromeliaceae, epiphyte ecology, epiphyte-ant relationships, biodiversity