Cactus Roots
Again, as might be expected, the cactus is a highly tuned
water preserving organism. The problem
is that first these highly tuned machines must access water they need. Everything you see above ground on a cacti is
designed to hold water in. The “skin” is
thick and contains a waxy layer on top and spines prevent animals from eating
the plant to obtain water. No water
enters the cactus from above ground and only the minimal amount necessary is
allowed to escape out of the cacti. Only
roots do the job of zealously drinking the latest rainfall. Nearly all cacti have very shallow root
systems, most of which only penetrate no more than one foot underground. A few cacti such as the saguaro have taproots
that penetrate as deep as three feet into the soil. Even that isn’t very deep compared to some
desert shrubs such as creosote brush with roots extending over six feet in
depth and Ironwood over 30 feet deep. But while cacti lack depth of roots they have
a vast breadth of shallow roots. I once
examined the root system of a saguaro cactus where most of the soil had been
eroded away on one side of it yet left the most of the root system intact and
free from soil. The saguaro’s roots
extended twenty plus feet away from the cactus and I couldn’t find a single
root deeper than 24 inches into the soil, most were about one foot deep. Others have traced the saguaro’s root system
as far as 50 feet from the trunk. Most
other cacti also have extensively shallow root systems.
Initially, it seems counter intuitive for desert plants to
have shallow roots until you realize that only rarely does moisture from rain
in the desert penetrate more than two or three feet deep. Then, once it does rain slumbering cacti
roots awaken within hours, sending out tiny rootlets that quickly absorb
water. And when a cactus drinks, it
doesn’t just sip, it binges by drinking as much as it can as fast as it can. In hot deserts roots can’t grow too close to
the surface simply because extreme soil temperatures kill the roots, so roots
begin about an inch below the surface.
In cooler regions, such as in Colorado, the soil surface doesn’t get
extremely hot so cacti roots can grow just millimeters below the surface,
greatly increasing their ability to take advantage of every little
rainfall. A scientist once found prickly
pear cacti in Colorado with roots only two millimeters below the surface. This cactus was able to survive on only two
millimeters of rain a year owed to the fact of its extremely shallow roots!
Once wet soil activates binge drinking, the cactus absorbs
way more water than it is currently using so it must store it somewhere. Tissue within the stems, pads, or joints
absorbs this water and stores it for later use.
As more water is absorbed the stem, pad or joint swells. Simply by looking at a cactus you can tell
how well watered it is. If it is swollen
it is well watered and good to go for months without rain, even in hot
weather. If it is skinny or looking
shriveled the cactus needs water. Cacti
are well adapted to swelling and shrinking.
Saguaros and other columnar cacti have palliated or accordion shaped
stems that readily expand when swollen with water or compress when water is
depleted. A mature Saguaro can hold
thousands of pounds of water by simply expanding its accordion shaped
skin. Pads of prickly pears and joints
of cholla, also swell and contract readily, easily doubling or more in size
when well watered.
After the desert soil dries out, roots begin to go
dormant. Tiny rootlets that developed in
the wet soil dry out and die. Wet
mucilage around the roots also dries out and forms a sheath surrounding the
roots preventing the roots from directly contacting the soil. When this happens, the cactus quits drinking
or even attempting to drink water from the soil. In-fact, the sheath functions as a barrier to
prevent any water from leaving the cactus.
This is actually quite unique to the plant world being most plants
require their roots to be in contact with at least a little moisture in the
soil at all times. Once the soil dries
out however, the cactus must draw from the reserves of water it has stored up
in its tissue in order to carry out photosynthesis. Even so, after a good rainstorm a cactus can
absorb enough water to carry it through many months of intense drought.
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