Quote:
Originally Posted by Whimgrinder
That was what I was saying as well: undoubtedly every river on Earth has acquired dissolved solids in addition to what came with the rain.
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Not if the river started a few hundred metres away at the top of a sandstone mountain. And what does this have to do with epiphytic or lithophytic orchids, i'm not sure what point your trying to make.
---------- Post added at 05:29 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:00 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
Epiphytes might not be as nutrient-deprived as people think. More and more plants are being found to grow in association with nitrogen-fixing organisms like cyanobacteria (blue-green algae.) Many cacti do. Perhaps orchids?
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Actually your post got me thinking, i noticed often that trees with no lichen, dont seem to get many, or any orchids, whereas trees that have a lot of lichen, also seem to get a lot of orchids. At the time i thought maybe its because the seeds get lodged on the tree easier, but maybe they steal some nutrients of the lichen as well?