samedi 28 avril 2012

Distribution and habitat


The genus Nepenthes is mostly found within the Malay Archipelago, with the greatest biodiversity found on Borneo and Sumatra, especially in the Borneo montane rain forests. The full range of the genus includes Madagascar (N. madagascariensis andN. masoalensis), the Seychelles (N. pervillei), Sri Lanka (N. distillatoria), and India (N. khasiana) in the west to Australia (N. mirabilisN. rowanae, and N. tenax) and New Caledonia (N. vieillardii) in the southeast. Most species are restricted to very small ranges, including some that are only found on individual mountains. These limited distributions and the inaccessibility of the region often means that some species go decades without being rediscovered in the wild (e.g. N. deaniana, which was rediscovered 100 years after its initial discovery). Approximately ten species have population distributions larger than a single island or group of smaller islands. Nepenthes mirabilis has the distinction of being the most widely distributed species in the genus, ranging fromIndochina and throughout the Malay Archipelago to Australia.[2][10][11]
Because of the nature of the habitats which Nepenthes species occupy, they are often graded as either lowland or highland species, depending on their altitude above sea level, with 1,200 m (3,937 ft) the rough delineation between lowland and highland. Species that grow at lower altitudes require continuously warm climates with little difference between day and night temperatures, whereas highland species thrive when they receive warm days and much cooler nights. Nepenthes lamii is the species that holds the record of growing at a higher altitude than any other in the genus, up to 3,520 m (11,549 ft).[2][11]
Most Nepenthes species grow in environments that provide high humidity and precipitation and moderate to high light levels. A few species, including N. ampullaria, prefer the dense, shaded forests, but most other species thrive on the margins of tree/shrub communities or clearings. Some species (e.g. N. mirabilis) have been found growing in clear-cut forest areas, roadsides, and disturbed fields. Other species have adapted to growing in savanna-like grass communities. The soils that Nepenthes grow in are usually acidic and low in nutrients, being composed of peat, white sand, sandstone, or volcanic soils. There are, however, exceptions to these generalities, including species that thrive in soils that have high heavy metalcontent (e.g. N. rajah), on sandy beaches in the sea spray zone (e.g. N. albomarginata). Other species grow on inselbergs and as lithophytes, while others, such as N. inermis, can grow as epiphytes with no soil contact.[2]
Distribution and habitat

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