Research Advances on Experimental Biology of Woody Plants of A Tamaulipan Thorn Scrub, Northeastern Mexico and Research Needs

Authors

  • Ratikanta Maiti Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo Leon, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Carr. Nac. No. 85 Km. 45, Linares, Nuevo Leon (67 700), Mexico
  • Humberto Gonzalez Rodriguez Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo Leon, Facultad de Ciencias Forestales, Carr. Nac. No. 85 Km. 45, Linares, Nuevo Leon (67 700), Mexico
  • Aruna Kumari Crop Physiology, Professor Jaya Shankar Telangana State Agricultural University, Agricultural College, Polasa, Jagtial, Karimnagar (505 529), India
  • N. C. Sarkar Dept. of Agronomy, Institute of Agriculture, Visva-Bharati, PO- Sriniketan, Birbhum (Dist), West Bengal (731 236), India

Keywords:

Woody plants, anatomy, ecophysiology, pigments, adaptation, xeric environments

Abstract

The present review makes a synthesis of various aspects of applied biology of more than 30 woody plant species of a Tamaulipan Thorn scrub, Northeastern Mexico. This deals with the biodiversity of leaf traits, leaf anatomy, plant characteristics, wood anatomy, wood density, phenology and few aspects of physiology and biochemistry viz., leaf pigments, leaf epicuticular wax, trees with high nutritional values, carbon fixation, nitrogen and protein contents. The results show a large variability of all the morpho-physiological traits of the woody species related to the co-existence and adaptation of the woody species in semiarid environments. Special emphasis has been given to discuss the role of various morpho-anatomical and ecophysiological traits for adaptation to xeric environments such leaf anatomical traits (leaf surface, leaf lamina, petiole, venation system) and wood anatomical traits and few ecophysiological traits suchas pigments, epicuticular wax, leaf nutrients, carbon fixation etc., which could be related to the adaptation of the species in xeric environment. Different woody species possess specific adaptive mechanisms in a forest ecosystem. This also suggests research needs and put forward few hypotheses for efficient management of forest system. No such inter-disciplinary studies are available on Tamaulipan Thorn scrub.

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Published

2016-10-25

How to Cite

1.
Maiti R, Rodriguez HG, Kumari A, Sarkar NC. Research Advances on Experimental Biology of Woody Plants of A Tamaulipan Thorn Scrub, Northeastern Mexico and Research Needs. IJBSM [Internet]. 2016 Oct. 25 [cited 2025 Sep. 21];7(Oct, 5):1197-205. Available from: https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJBSM/article/view/1014

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