Last year I told you about our course in BioArt. Students work in teams to conduct research in the Sonoran Desert, and they communicate that research through a creative work of art. In the Spring semester of 2021, we had another great group of students work on projects in this course, creating wonderful works of Sonoran Desert art!
Anastasia and Rachael studied the role of desert vertebrates in the spread of cholla, a common cactus species in the Sonoran Desert. Cholla spreads to new habitats by dropping segments of the plant (called "tubercles") that can take root in the soil where they land. These tubercles are covered in hooked spines that work like velcro: they catch on the fur of coyotes, rabbits, and other mammals to be carried around and dropped somewhere new, away from the parent plant. So these animals are important to help spread this cactus, but humans are changing the abundance of these animals! How will urbanization impact the spread of this desert plant species? Anastasia and Rachael used camera traps and other survey techniques to learn which animals were associated with cholla plants. They learned that coyotes, deer, rabbits, and packrats were active in the area around chollas in the Sonoran Desert. Learn more about it in their research poster.
To demonstrate the action of a tubercle being removed from the cactus and spread to new habitats, Anastasia and Rachael created a soundscape video and an interactive cactus model. You can play the video to hear the sound of a tubercle being ripped from the cactus as it would be by a passing desert mammal. Tubercles stick to mammalian pelts because of tiny barbs on the cactus arms, ripping the tubercle off the main body like Velcro is ripped apart. This is the reasoning behind creating the interactive cactus model – arms are attached to the cactus body via Velcro, so viewers can experience the sensation of ripping a cactus arm off the main body.
Joe and Mikayla explored whether the number of arms on saguaro cacti are related to water availability. Scientists don't actually know what signals saguaros to grow their iconic arms. We know it doesn't happen until they are older, and some saguaros don't grow arms at all! One hypothesis is that the arms are for extra water storage, in which case the number of arms would relate to water availability. Mikayla and Joe measured soil moisture along gradients from sources of water, and counted the number of arms on the saguaros at those locations. They did not find a relationship between soil water (or distance from the source of water) on the number of arms on the saguaros growing there. So... the reason for saguaros to grow arms remains a mystery! Learn more about it in their research poster.
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