Habitat association among Amazonian tree species:: a landscape-scale approach

被引:269
|
作者
Phillips, OL [1 ]
Vargas, PN
Monteagudo, AL
Cruz, AP
Zans, MEC
Sánchez, WG
Yli-Halla, M
Rose, S
机构
[1] Univ Leeds, Sch Geog, Earth & Biosphere Inst, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England
[2] Biodivers Amazonico, Cuzco, Peru
[3] Univ Nacl, Herbario Vargas, San Antonio Abad Del Cus, Peru
[4] Jardin Bot Missouri, Oxapampa, Peru
[5] MTT, Agrifood Res Finland, Jokioinen, Finland
关键词
forest; floristics; soils; spatial autocorrelation; tree species composition;
D O I
10.1046/j.1365-2745.2003.00815.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
1 Unravelling which factors affect where tropical trees grow is an important goal for ecologists and conservationists. At the landscape scale, debate is mostly focused on the degree to which the distributions of tree species are determined by soil conditions or by neutral, distance-dependent processes. Problems with spatial autocorrelation, sparse soil sampling, inclusion of species-poor sites with extreme edaphic conditions, and the difficulty of obtaining sufficient sample sizes have all complicated assessments for high diversity tropical forests. 2 We evaluated the extent and pervasiveness of habitat association of trees within a 10 000 km 2 species-rich lowland landscape of uniform climate in south-west Amazonia. Forests growing on two non-flooded landscape units were inventoried using 88 floristic plots and detailed soil analyses, sampling up to 849 tree species. We applied single-species and community-level analytical techniques (frequency-distributions of presence records, association analysis, indicator species analysis, ordination, Mantel correlations, and multiple regression of distance matrices) to quantify soil/floristic relationships while controlling for spatial autocorrelation. 3 Obligate habitat-restriction is very rare: among 230 tree species recorded in greater than or equal to 10 localities only five (2.2%) were always restricted to one landscape unit or the other. 4 However, many species show a significant tendency to habitat association. For example, using Monte Carlo randomization tests, of the 34 most dominant species across the landscape the distributions of 26 (76.5%) are significantly related to habitat. We applied density-independent and frequency-independent estimates of habitat association and found that rarer species tend to score higher, suggesting that our full community estimates of habitat association are still underestimated due to the inadequate sampling of rarer species. 5 Community-level floristic variation across the whole landscape is related to the variation in 14 of 16 measured soil variables, and to the geographical distances between samples. 6 Multiple regression of distance matrices shows that 10% of the floristic variation can be attributed to spatial autocorrelation, but even after accounting for this at least 40% is attributable to measured environmental variation. 7 Our results suggest that substrate-mediated local processes play a much more important role than distance-dependent processes in structuring forest composition in Amazonian landscapes.
引用
收藏
页码:757 / 775
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Influence of soils and topography on Amazonian tree diversity: a landscape-scale study
    Laurance, Susan G. W.
    Laurance, William F.
    Andrade, Ana
    Fearnside, Philip M.
    Harms, Kyle E.
    Vicentini, Alberto
    Luizao, Regina C. C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2010, 21 (01) : 96 - 106
  • [2] Landscape-scale habitat assessment for an imperiled avian species
    Burkhalter, C.
    Holloran, M. J.
    Fedy, B. C.
    Copeland, H. E.
    Crabtree, R. L.
    Michel, N. L.
    Jay, S. C.
    Rutledge, B. A.
    Holloran, A. G.
    [J]. ANIMAL CONSERVATION, 2018, 21 (03) : 241 - 251
  • [3] Landscape-scale habitat suitability indices
    [J]. NCASI Tech Bull, 781 I (198):
  • [4] Habitat restoration requires landscape-scale planning
    Helm, Aveliina
    [J]. APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2015, 18 (02) : 177 - 178
  • [5] Avian community response to landscape-scale habitat reclamation
    Barlow, Natasha L.
    Kirol, Christopher P.
    Fedy, Bradley C.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2020, 252
  • [6] Landscape-Scale Approach to Quantifying Habitat Credits for A Greater Sage-grouse Habitat Conservation Bank
    LeBeau, Chad W.
    Strickland, M. Dale
    Johnson, Gregory D.
    Frank, Michael S.
    [J]. RANGELAND ECOLOGY & MANAGEMENT, 2018, 71 (02) : 149 - 158
  • [7] Thinking Big: Lessons Learned from a Landscape-Scale Approach to Coastal Habitat Conservation
    Chabot, Helen
    Farrow, Dan
    York, Dawn
    Harris, Janine
    Cosentino-Manning, Natalie
    Watson, Lani
    Hum, Kim
    Wiggins, Chad
    [J]. COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2016, 44 (03) : 175 - 192
  • [8] Total aboveground biomass in central Amazonian rainforests: a landscape-scale study
    Nascimento, HEM
    Laurance, WF
    [J]. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2002, 168 (1-3) : 311 - 321
  • [9] Landscape-scale differences among cities alter common species' responses to urbanization
    Fidino, Mason
    Gallo, Travis
    Lehrer, Elizabeth W.
    Murray, Maureen H.
    Kay, Cria A. M.
    Sander, Heather A.
    MacDougall, Brandon
    Salsbury, Carmen M.
    Ryan, Travis J.
    Angstmann, Julia L.
    Belaire, J. Amy
    Dugelby, Barbara
    Schell, Christopher J.
    Stankowich, Theodore
    Amaya, Max
    Drake, David
    Hursh, Sheryl H.
    Ahlers, Adam A.
    Williamson, Jacque
    Hartley, Laurel M.
    Zellmer, Amanda J.
    Simon, Kelly
    Magle, Seth B.
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2021, 31 (02)
  • [10] Advancing Coastal Habitat Resiliency Through Landscape-Scale Assessment
    Basso, Georgia
    Vaudrey, Jamie M. P.
    O'Brien, Kevin
    Barrett, Juliana
    [J]. COASTAL MANAGEMENT, 2018, 46 (01) : 19 - 39