328 STRUCTURE AND LIFE HISTORIES 



monly restricted to those cases where there is no phys- 

 iological or nutritional relationship between the two. A 

 vine climbing up a tree is an epiphyte, as are also the 

 Pleurococcus and mosses growing on the tree trunks. Epi- 

 phytism is specially common in the tropics where orchids, 



Fig. 235.' — An epiphytic Clusia. (From photo by G. V. Nash, 

 taken in Flaiti.) 



ferns, hohenbergias, and great lianas (vines) are found 

 growing in profusion on other plants (Figs. 234, 235, and 

 236). 



308. Mutualism. — The associating together of two 

 plants in intimate physiological relationship, to their 



