Bromeliads comprise an entire order of flowering plants called Bromeliales. The pineapple is the most familiar member of this tropical American group, which also includes some of the most interesting plants of the rainforest—the tank bromeliads. Most bromeliads are epiphytes—that is, plants that live attached to other vegetation. Many live high above the forest floor, deriving energy from photosynthesis, water from rain, and nutrients mainly from falling debris and windblown dust.
The tank bromeliads have relationships with a wide variety of other organisms. The water held in the leaf rosette of a tank bromeliad forms a virtual aquarium, which may contain up to 20 litres (5 gallons) of water. Several hundred species of aquatic organisms can be found in these habitats, and some are found nowhere else except in bromeliad pools. Among the creatures found here are fungi, algae, protozoa, and small invertebrates such as insects, spiders, scorpions, mites, worms, and even crabs. Vertebrate inhabitants of bromeliad tanks include frogs, salamanders, and snakes. Animal life, however, is dominated by insects, especially dipterans (two-winged flies) such as nonbiting midges and mosquitoes. On occasion, an aquatic species of bladderwort can be found floating in bromeliad tanks.
These small, discrete, relatively stable communities can serve as valuable models for studying biological processes. In a typical food web of a bromeliad pool, energy and nutrients flow from solutes and organic detritus in the water, through bacteria and protozoa, to browsing or filter-feeding mosquito larvae, and thence to aquatic predators such as crabs, larvae of other mosquitoes, and damselflies. Within the confines of a pool the risk of predation is severe. Among the predators are two genera of damselfly (Diceratobasis and Leptagrion) that are known from no other habitat. Predator becomes prey, however, should a bromeliad crab (Metopaulias depressus) choose the pool for its offspring. In order to protect its larvae from such predators, the crab kills all damselfly larvae in a pool before placing its own progeny there.
A female strawberry poison frog (Dendrobates pumilio; see arrow-poison frog) uses a different strategy to protect her young. She transports one or two newly hatched tadpoles from the leaves on which her eggs are laid to a bromeliad pool, which serves as a nursery. She then exhibits parental care by depositing in the pool nutritive (nonviable) eggs on which the developing tadpoles feed.
Tree frog tadpoles, on the other hand, must fend for themselves within the pool. Mosquito larvae are commonly fed upon by the tadpoles, and certain larvae are not safe even from each other. Toxorhynchites mosquito larvae are both predatory and cannibalistic, and individuals are especially vulnerable to cannibalism just after molting. In a preemptive strategy a large larva, about to become a pupa, will doggedly kill, but not consume, any other mosquito larva it encounters.
The Anopheles mosquito, the vector for the organism that causes malaria in humans, requires fresh standing water in order to complete the larval stages of its life cycle. When it was discovered that tank bromeliads are ideal sites for the mosquito to complete its life cycle, programs of bromeliad eradication were implemented as one part of the overall effort to eliminate Anopheles from malaria-plagued regions.