INVESTIGADORES
GURVICH Diego Ezequiel
artículos
Título:
Spine function in Cactaceae, a review
Autor/es:
ALISCIONI, N.L.; DELBÓN, N.E.; GURVICH, D.E.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF THE PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR CACTUS DEVELOPMENT
Editorial:
PROFESSIONAL ASSOC CACTUS DEVELOPMENT
Referencias:
Lugar: Lago Vista, Texas, EE.UU.; Año: 2021 vol. 23 p. 1 - 11
ISSN:
1938-663X
Resumen:
Spines are one of the most conspicuous organs of cacti and are present even in the most basal species of the family. The aim of this review was to analyse the proven functions of spines, the number of species studied, their taxonomical (subfamily) and the geographic origin of studied species. Twenty-four studies that analyzed a total of five functions were found. A total of 39 species (around 2% of total diversity in the family) were studied. The most studied function was thermoregulation, where spines protect the stem from extreme temperatures, followed by anti-herbivory defense. Other functions are water collection, dispersion and antiparasitism defense. Most of the studied species belong to the Cactoideae subfamily, ten to Opuntioideae subfamily and only one, to the Pereskioideae. There is also a bias to the study of species from North America, particularly Mexico and United States of America (USA). The most studied species was Carnegiea gigantea that was the subject of 5 published papers. Surprisingly, there are few studies that analyzed species in environmental gradients or that analyzed the effect of spine removal. These results indicate the necessity of further investigation that include species with different spinescence patterns, and which rigorously test possible functions.