Spatial species turnover maintains high diversities in a tree assemblage of a fragmented tropical landscape

被引:8
|
作者
Carneiro, Magda Silva [1 ]
Furtado Campos, Caroline Cambraia [2 ]
Ramos, Flavio Nunes [2 ]
Maes Dos Santos, Flavio Antonio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Estadual Campinas, Inst Biol, Dept Biol Vegetal, C Postal 6109, BR-13083970 Campinas, SP, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Alfenas UNIFAL MG, Inst Ciencias Nat, Lab Ecol Fragmentos Florestais ECOFRAG, Rua Gabriel Monteiro Silva 700, BR-37130000 Alfenas, MG, Brazil
来源
ECOSPHERE | 2016年 / 7卷 / 10期
关键词
alpha diversity; beta diversity; flora differentiation; floristic homogenization; landscape context; nestedness; BETA-DIVERSITY; PLANT DIVERSITY; FORESTS; BIODIVERSITY; NESTEDNESS; PATTERNS; SOUTH;
D O I
10.1002/ecs2.1500
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The fragmentation process has many negative effects on communities, particularly for plants. This process can generate two distinct scenarios: homogenization of species composition, due to assemblage nestedness, or flora differentiation, due to spatial species turnover. The aim of this study was to answer the following questions: (1) Is the tree canopy and understory community of a highly fragmented landscape (9% of forest cover) the result of species nestedness or turnover? (2) Is the pattern of additive partitioning of diversity similar between the understory and canopy tree communities? and (3) Are landscape characteristics responsible for diversity partitioning of the tree assemblage? The studied area has low remaining forest coverage (similar to 9%), caused by deforestation that started in the 18th century, and a very heterogeneous matrix around forest patches. Within this landscape context, we hypothesized that the tree assemblage (both canopy and understory strata) in the studied fragments would be homogeneous, as a consequence of a nested subset. The study was carried out in nine fragments of submontane semideciduous Atlantic Forest. All individuals with a height >1 m in 10 (200 m(2)) plots in each studied fragment were sampled, measured, and divided into two strata (canopy and understory individuals). The study found that the high beta diversity among plots and among fragments in both strata was due to species turnover (avoiding species homogenization) and that the landscape characteristics tested were not responsible for this result. These fragments present many rare and exclusive species and are not dominated by only a few species. In this scenario, it is necessary to conserve as many fragments as possible to protect most of tree assemblage because each fragment has a unique species composition.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Production of Tetraploid Forms of Eight Tropical Landscape Tree Species
    Leonhardt, K. W.
    Shi, X.
    VI INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON NEW FLORICULTURAL CROPS, 2009, 813 : 133 - 139
  • [22] Genetic structure of a bird-dispersed tropical tree (Dendropanax arboreus) in a fragmented landscape in Mexico
    Figueroa-Esquivel, Elsa M.
    Puebla-Olivares, Fernando
    Eguiarte, Luis E.
    Nunez-Farfan, Juan
    REVISTA MEXICANA DE BIODIVERSIDAD, 2010, 81 (03) : 789 - 800
  • [23] Restored connectivity facilitates recruitment by an endemic large-seeded tree in a fragmented tropical landscape
    de la Pena-Domene, Marinrs
    Minor, Emily S.
    Howe, Henry F.
    ECOLOGY, 2016, 97 (09) : 2511 - 2517
  • [24] Pollen dispersal and genetic structure of the tropical tree Dipteryx panamensis in a fragmented Costa Rican landscape
    Hanson, Thor R.
    Brunsfeld, Steven J.
    Finegan, Bryan
    Waits, Lisette P.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2008, 17 (08) : 2060 - 2073
  • [25] Determinants and spatial modeling of tree β-diversity in a tropical forest landscape in Panama
    Chust, G
    Chave, J
    Condit, R
    Aguilar, S
    Lao, S
    Pérez, R
    JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2006, 17 (01) : 83 - 92
  • [26] Modelling the spatial distribution of tree species with fragmented populations from abundance data
    L. Scarnati
    F. Attorre
    A. Farcomeni
    F. Francesconi
    M. De Sanctis
    Community Ecology, 2009, 10 : 215 - 224
  • [27] Modelling the spatial distribution of tree species with fragmented populations from abundance data
    Scarnati, L.
    Attorre, F.
    Farcomeni, A.
    Francesconi, F.
    De Sanctis, M.
    COMMUNITY ECOLOGY, 2009, 10 (02) : 215 - 224
  • [28] Conservation of tropical forest tree species in a native timber plantation landscape
    Pryde, Elizabeth C.
    Holland, Greg J.
    Watson, Simon J.
    Turton, Stephen M.
    Nimmo, Dale G.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2015, 339 : 96 - 104
  • [29] Recruitment in Tropical Tree Species: Revealing Complex Spatial Patterns
    Wiegand, Thorsten
    Martinez, Isabel
    Huth, Andreas
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2009, 174 (04): : E106 - E140
  • [30] Soil nutrients influence spatial distributions of tropical tree species
    John, Robert
    Dalling, James W.
    Harms, Kyle E.
    Yavitt, Joseph B.
    Stallard, Robert F.
    Mirabello, Matthew
    Hubbell, Stephen P.
    Valencia, Renato
    Navarrete, Hugo
    Vallejo, Martha
    Foster, Robin B.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2007, 104 (03) : 864 - 869