Re: ?? Water-loving Anthurium species


Greetings,

 

. . . actually, Marek, I think that rheophytes are plants that grow next to flowing water and have their roots growing out into the current, or are plants that actually grow in flowing water.

 

Happy days,

Christopher

 

D. Christopher Rogers

Senior Invertebrate Ecologist/ Taxonomist

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-----Original Message-----
From: aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com [mailto:aroid-l-bounces@gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Marek Argent
Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2009 8:10 AM
To: Discussion of aroids
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] ?? Water-loving Anthurium species

 

Hello,

 

Plants growing on rocks and stones are epilithic plants (epilithes) or

rheophytes,

I don't know if there is a special term for plants growing near water.

 

Marek

 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Devin Biggs" <dbiggs@xantusidesign.net>

To: <aroid-l@gizmoworks.com>

Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2009 3:02 AM

Subject: [Aroid-l] ?? Water-loving Anthurium species

 

 

> Hi All,

> 

> I recently ran into a thread on the UBC Botanical Garden Forums which

> mentioned several terrestrial Anthurium species that occur in

> very wet situations in nature, including river banks and streamside rocks.

> The roots of these anthuriums might grow right in the water

> or in very wet media for extended periods or permanently. I am on the hunt

> for Anthurium that grow well in saturated soils and wonder

> if anybody can help me to source some of these plants(?).

> 

> Here are some of the species mentioned in those forum posts:

> 

> A. amnicola

> A. antiquiense

> A. riparium

> A. rivularis

> A. rupicola

> A. sagittatum

> A. werfii

> 

> Is there a technical terms to describe plants that grow on rocks with

> their roots in the water? There are a number of aquarium plants

> that use such habitats.

> 

> Thanks for considering this. I really would like to hear any ideas for

> sources that might come to mind. Incidentally, a post in that same

> thread also mentioned that "both amnicola and rupicola grow in sympatry

> with a fully aquatic Spathiphyllum sp.". I have never heard of

> any fully-aquatic Spathiphyllum, and I would really like to know more

> about that too.

> 

> Thanks very much!

> 

> Regards,

> 

> Devin

> _______________________________________________

> Aroid-L mailing list

> Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com

> http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l

> 

 

 

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