Skip to main content
The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia
Faculty of Science Department of Zoology

Main navigation

  • About
    • Message from Head
    • Department History
    • News
    • Publications
    • ZOOTAILS - the zoology newsletter
    • Welcome New Faculty
    • In Memoriam
    • Departmental Announcements
    • Contacts and Information
    • Jobs
    • Buildings
    • Transportation & Parking
  • People
    • People
    • Faculty - Research
    • Faculty - Educational leadership
    • Lecturers
    • Staff
    • Graduate Students
    • Postdoctoral Fellows
    • Associate Members
    • Adjunct Members
    • Affiliate Members
    • Research Associates
    • Research Lab staff
    • Emeriti
    • Alumni
    • Awards
  • Research
    • Research
    • Facilities
    • Affiliated Research Centres
    • Graduate Theses
  • Undergraduate Program
    • Undergraduate Program
    • Undergraduate Research Opportunities
    • Biology Program
    • UBC Sciences – Biology
  • Graduate Program
    • Graduate Program
    • Prospective Students
    • Newly Admitted Students
    • Current Students
    • Program Policies & Procedures
    • Student Resources
    • Department Forms
    • Zoology Graduate Student Association
    • Student Stories
    • Contacts
  • Events
    • Events
    • Weekly Seminars
    • Special Seminars and Events
    • CELL seminars
    • Discussion Groups
    • Calendar
    • Event Archive
  • Resources
    • Biostats and Data Science Faculty search (CWL login)
    • Resources
    • Safety
    • Onboarding
    • Workday
    • Building access: keys and cards
    • Room and Vehicle Bookings: Biosci & BRC (log in)
    • Room Bookings: North & East wings Biosci
    • Shipping & Receiving
    • Staff Directory
    • Aquatics (private)
    • Computing (ZCU)
    • Finance
    • HR: Human Resources
    • Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Resources
    • Harassment and Discrimination complaints: steps and resources
    • Zoology Internal pages (private)
    • Recycling initiatives
    • Zoology Logo
    • Zoology Workshop
  • CWL Login

Breadcrumb

Home
»
About
»
News

Main Menu: Secondary

  • Message from Head
  • Department History
    • About the "Huts"
  • News
  • Publications
  • ZOOTAILS - the zoology newsletter
  • Welcome New Faculty
  • In Memoriam
  • Departmental Announcements
    • 2025
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • 2020
    • 2019
  • Contacts and Information
  • Jobs
    • Past jobs
  • Buildings
  • Transportation & Parking

New publication: Pierre Rogy & Diane Srivastava. Aquatic Botany

April 19, 2023

Pierre Rogy & Diane Srivastava. 2023. Bromeliads compete with microorganisms for nutrients in their phytotelm. Aquatic Botany

Abstract
Tank bromeliads impound water between their leaves, and have been successfully used as a model system to develop ecological theory. One fundamental interaction remains, however, unexplored in this system: the potential for bromeliad plants to compete with aquatic microorganisms for nutrients in their water-filled tanks. Here we conduct the first experimental test of this interaction by directly blocking bromeliads from accessing phytotelm water and quantifying change in the concentrations of dissolved inorganic nitrogen, phosphate, autotrophic algae and heterotrophic bacteria. To understand any context-dependency of responses, we crossed this manipulation with different combinations of light exposure and allochthonous resource type. We found that bromeliads reduced the concentrations of dissolved inorganic nitrogen, especially when the resource was nutrient-rich. Bromeliads also reduced the concentration of heterotrophic bacteria within their tank regardless of environmental context and algal concentrations particularly under high light, nutrient-rich resource conditions. Our results demonstrate that bromeliads can strongly impact their phytotelm by reducing the concentration of key nutrients, concomitantly reducing densities of algae under optimal growth conditions. This strong competition with algae for nutrients may explain why high abundances of algae within wild tank bromeliads are only found under specific field conditions. Bacteria may have a more commensal relationship with bromeliads, as they tend to increase bromeliad nutrition through decomposition. In conclusion, our study underlines that tank bromeliads do not only provide habitats for other species, but also interact strongly with the aquatic ecosystem that they create.

Department of Zoology
#3051 - 6270 University Blvd.
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4
604 822 2131
E-mail zoology.info@ubc.ca
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • UBC Copyright |
  • Accessibility