Search

Adaptive strategies in young Inga vera subsp. affinis plants under flooding.

Feitosa RMP, Ximenez GR, Pastorini LH, Romagnolo MB

Climate Adaptation

Riparian forests along flood-prone rivers are among the hardest native ecosystems to restore — knowing which trees can actually handle standing water tells land managers and native-plant gardeners exactly what to plant where the ground stays wet.

Researchers flooded young Inga vera seedlings for 44 days to see how the plants coped. The plants grew more slowly and their leaves made less of the green pigment used for photosynthesis, but they ramped up sugar production and sent those sugars down to their roots — essentially fueling the root system to stay alive while the rest of the plant paused. This tells us the species has built-in ways to ride out floods, which is exactly what you need from a tree meant to grow along a river.

Key Findings

1

Seedlings flooded for 44 days showed measurably reduced height, root length, and leaf area compared to controls.

2

Photosynthetic pigment levels dropped under flooding, indicating suppressed leaf-level energy capture.

3

Soluble sugar production increased and was reallocated from leaves to roots, suggesting active carbohydrate redistribution as a flood-survival mechanism.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Inga vera, a riparian tree native to Brazil's Atlantic Forest, survives weeks of flooding by slowing growth and shifting sugar reserves to its roots — a physiological survival strategy that makes it a strong candidate for restoring flood-prone riverbanks.

description

Abstract Preview

Inga vera subsp. affinis (DC.) T.D.Penn. is a common species in riparian vegetation of the Atlantic Forest within the Upper Paraná River Floodplain (UPRF) and of great ecological importance in the ...

open_in_new Read full abstract

Abstract copyright held by the original publisher.

hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Inga vera, Ingá climate-adaptation, native-plants, riparian-restoration +2 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

Was this useful?

mail Weekly plant science — one email, Saturdays.

Share: X/Twitter Reddit
arrow_forward Next Discovery

Urban Tree Canopy Reduces Heat-Related Mortality by 39% in European Cities

Trees in your local park or street aren't just pretty — they are literally keeping people alive during heatwaves, and planting even a modest number of the ri...