Nutrients
Lithophytes that grow on land feed off nutrients from rain water and nearby decaying plants, including their own dead tissue. It is easier for Chasmophytes to acquire nutrients because they grow in fissures in rocks where soil or organic matter has accumulated. For most Lithophytes, nitrogen is only available through interactions with the atmosphere. The most readily available form of nitrogen in the atmosphere is the gaseous state of ammonia (NH3). Lithophytes consume atmospheric ammonia through a concentration gradient that allows the compound to traverse the plants' apoplast. Once free in the apoplast, gaseous ammonia is absorbed into metabolic cells by the enzyme glutamine synthetase. To be able to absorb the few nutrients available on rocks or rocky substrates efficiently, Lithophytes have evolved certain adaptations. They possess decreased numbers of root hairs and larger root diameters in comparison to other plant species. To add to this nutrient uptake efficiency, lithophytic plants have increased their relationship with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and dark septate endophyte fungi. These two types of fungi live inter- and intracellularly with the roots of Lithophytes and a wide variety of other plant species. They increase the uptake of nutrients and water and have been found in greater concentrations in Lithophytes.Walls colonised as artificial cliffs by lithophytes
Walls, and other exposed stonework, are colonised by plants in a similar way to the colonisation of cliffs and scree. These natural features are uncommon, especially in the lowlands, so walls are important for the conservation of plants which might otherwise be very isolated. Some wall plants even have ‘wall’ or ‘muralis’ as part of their common or scientific name such as Wall-flower ('' Erysimum cheiri'') or Ivy-leaved toadflax (''Cymbalaria muralis ''Cymbalaria muralis'', commonly called ivy-leaved toadflax or Kenilworth ivy, is a low, spreading, viney plant with small purple flowers, native to southern Europe. It belongs to the plantain family (Plantaginaceae), and is introduced in North A ...''), which shows their long established relationship with these man-made structures.
English Heritage
''Landscape Advice Note: Vegetation on Walls''
Examples
Examples of lithophytes include many orchids such as '' Dendrobium'' and '' Paphiopedilum'', bromeliads such as '' Tillandsia'', as well as many ferns,Carnivorous plants
As nutrients tend to be rarely available to lithophytes or chasmophytes, many species of carnivorous plants can be viewed as being pre-adapted to life on rocks. By consuming prey, these plants can gather more nutrients than non-carnivorous lithophytes.McPherson, S.R. (2010). ''Carnivorous Plants and their Habitats. Volume 1.'' Redfern Natural History Productions, Poole. pp. 176–180. Examples include the pitcher plants '' Nepenthes campanulata'' and '' Heliamphora exappendiculata'', many '' Pinguicula'' and several '' Utricularia'' species.Tennyson poem inspired by lithophyte
In the year 1863,Flower in the crannied wall, I pluck you out of the crannies, I hold you here, root and all, in my hand, Little flower—but if I could understand What you are, root and all, and all in all, I should know what God and man is.''Poems of Alfred Lord Tennyson.'' Eugene Parsons (Introduction). New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1900.
Gallery
See also
* Epibiont, an organism that grows on another life form *References
Plant morphology {{Botany-stub he:מורפולוגיה של הצמח - מונחים#צורות חיים ושלבי חיים של צמחים