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Strangler Fig

Ficus sp.

Photo by Dan Doucette
Published on Project Noah
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6.68712, -1.62197

Field Notes

Description:

hollow strangler fig

Habitat:

rainforest

Notes:

The tree this fig strangled has totally died and rotted away, leaving a hollow fig. Spotted in Baobeng Fiema monkey sanctuary. One of my favorite trees.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (41)

nice perspective!
Yes Dan, its strange :) @Tom: probably your quote is right, I can see that fig is sometime a holy trees or I don't know, sacred.
I think I might be getting ready to "bear spiritual fruit" ...if I don't strangle someone first. Tom
Great article achmmad! It really explains it well, though get a bit strange when it compares the strangular fig to being a good christian. Thanks jessica!
Just another info : http://www.stepstolife.org/php/view_article.php?article_id=1817
You're welcome Dan! may be I need to check it also. I think its not to hard because fig is one of the unique plant found at tropical rain forest.
Thanks Goody and achmmad for your input on this. @Tom, what can I say? I still stick with my original comment about the strangler fig.
Off course its vary among species. I don't know about ficus and palm since I just have see small one on king palm trunk. Palm is a monocot. I think it caused by fast growing of ficus root. And as far as i have understand, only damaged or infected stem can bulge out. This one which has done by ficus is a mechanic. Anyway, I just look at the spaces between ficus root above. Look at the higher position, there are two windows (hollow) that wider than the others. Possibly this ficus formerly grown on the branch point. So, it will leave the big hollow on it's side because there are two big stem branch that persist until this roots become permanent. I just observed in some of legume and ficus is growing on the center of the branch. And the cross-root (relatively to the hollow) is the place where ficus grown for the first time. off course this case won't work at palm since palms rarely have stem branch.
Achmmad, Dan, & All... Yes, most trees get their nutrition from below, traveling just under the bark. But Palms do not. In my area, I can observe many figs climbing palms and yes, often I can see that, like other trees, the palm has died. Perhaps the fig is making a canopy so dense that it kills the host. When a growing tree trunk is being constricted by something like another tree's branch or fence wire pressing against it, the tree trunk will bulge out in the place where it is not constricted. I have not observed any fig host trees doing this. (But with an open mind, I will watch for that.) Tom
I really like the perspective of the first shot.
One more, I see a trees with three leaves: Ficus, Artocarpus and a certain species. My mother and father showed me, and its real. The ficus actually can grow optimal, left the host stand with it white big stem. Try to get it if possible ... just km from my hometown ...
Hi tplattenberger ... thanks for great story you have! Just notice that they capable to stop host stem growth. So, I personally called it passive strangling. I don't know why sometime the host die, may be come from competition of nutrition and not-growth stem, xylem inside lignified and the tissue grow old. No more floem produced means that there are no sugar transport from the leaves to root through stem (bark). And again, passive strangler although the figs are grow outward and inward, but their press on host stem just give little effect. :) *sorry for bad English ...
Hello again, Dan and All... It has been a while since I looked at this photo. Now, I am reminded of a place I occasionally visited, some 30 years ago, near Berkeley, California. We called it the Tree Circus. It was a grove of trees that I now presume was ficus. It was abandoned and overgrown, but at one time, someone had spent a lot of time, manipulating these trees into fantastic shapes. Many were braided together in groups. There were big circles of trees that were woven together in indicate patterns. Children could squeeze inside to play and climb. The last time I visited, the whole area was to be dozed for a condo project. So the tree circus is long gone but not forgotten. Somewhere, I have some pretty cool black and white photos. Meanwhile... Dan, I have still not let-go, my theory that the fig is not really strangling its host.
i would love to see this tree from the usual angle. Maybe other people have posted this already, I better check..
Tom I believe the mortality of the host tree is caused by the constriction of the fig, and not by the fig outliving its host. The constriction reduces the host trees ability to transport nutrients to and from its own crown. Strangler figs are very aggressive. True, sometimes they live happily together but I think the host will eventually die. Maybe the fig hasn't evolved in the best way but like you said, the host allows the fig to thrive in the canopy and maybe longevity isn't the key here. The fig will have flowered and fruited many times before it's hosts possible death and before its potential collapse after the hosts death.
Hola Dan... You have an amazing photo collection. I do a lot of tramping about in the woods here in west coastal Mexico. Yes, the strangler fig has an amazing growth habit, but I am developing the opinion that "strangler" might be a misnomer. Hundreds of times I see trees hosting the strangler fig and both seem to be alive and well. It is all about competition for sunlight. It makes no sense to me that the strangler fig would evolve into a plant that strangles the host that allows it to thrive in the canopy. As you say, the strangler fig cannot long stand on its own. Yes, certainly some hosts die, but I am wondering if this is because the fig has simply out-lived the host. If a very heavy rock is leaning against a tree, or if someone staples a fence wire to a tree, after time, it can be observed that the tree will bulge out around the object. I have never seen any evidence in these forests where a host tree seemed to bulge out in the openings left by an engulfing strangler fig. In my observations, it has never seemed to me that the strangler fig was doing anything more than just using the host tree as a support. How 'bout you? Thanks for the great sharing that you do. Tom
I have never seen anything like it before - very cool!
VERY neat picture, creative shot of a very interesting kind of plant! And yes, very cool to see it after it's finished "strangling" another tree!
thanks everyone. with such a great response to the photo, I will add some more photos of strangler figs. they are one of my favorite trees
thanks everybody. yes Ummu, these trees thrive in tropical regions around the world
I wonder Ummu why our last field trip on forest ecology didnt found this tree.... but im glad it a tree... with snake capability LOL
nice shot! this picture make me wonder how the physiology of that tree.thanks for sharing.
Awesome shot Dan! It's not often you see a strangler with the job completed...

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