Fine-scale habitat differentiation shapes the composition, structure and aboveground biomass but not species richness of a tropical Atlantic forest

被引:0
|
作者
Alice Cristina Rodrigues
Pedro Manuel Villa
Arshad Ali
Walnir Ferreira-Júnior
Andreza Viana Neri
机构
[1] Universidade Federal de Viçosa,Laboratório de Ecologia e Evolução de Plantas–LEEP, Departamento de Biologia Vegetal
[2] Fundación para la Conservación de la Biodiversidad,College of Forestry
[3] Nanjing Forestry University,Setor de Biologia e Meio Ambiente
[4] Instituto Federal do Sul de Minas Gerais -IFSULDEMINAS- Campus Machado,undefined
来源
关键词
Community–habitat associations; Convexity; Rarefaction; Topographic variability;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Evaluating the influences of fine-scale habitat heterogeneity on the composition, diversity, structure and functioning of forests is critical to understand how tropical forests will respond to climate change and devise forest management strategies that will enhance biodiversity conservation and aboveground biomass stock. Here, we hypothesized that topographic and soil factors determine fine-scale habitat differentiation, which in turn shape community composition, species richness, structure and aboveground biomass at the local scale in tropical forests. To test this hypothesis, we selected two areas (each 100 × 100 m) with contrasting fine-scale topographic conditions where all trees, palms and lianas with a diameter at breast height ≥ 10 cm were tagged and identified to species. In each selected area, 100 subplots of 10 × 10 m were established. We mainly found that higher topographic variability caused higher habitat differentiation with changes in species composition and community structure, but did not change species richness. Our habitat-scale analyses indicated that, in the less heterogeneous area, the distribution of species was more uniform along a fine-scale topographical gradient with no variation in convexity, which induced changes in structure and aboveground biomass, but not in species richness. The nonsignificant relationship between species richness and aboveground biomass may be attributable to species redundancy or functional dominance. This study suggests that environmental filtering is a fundamental process for shaping community assembly and forest functioning along a local topographical gradient in tropical forests.
引用
收藏
页码:1599 / 1611
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Fine-scale spatial genetic structure of eight tropical tree species as analysed by RAPDs
    Degen, B
    Caron, H
    Bandou, E
    Maggia, L
    Chevallier, MH
    Leveau, A
    Kremer, A
    HEREDITY, 2001, 87 (4) : 497 - 507
  • [22] Fine-scale spatial genetic structure of eight tropical tree species as analysed by RAPDs
    Bernd Degen
    Henri Caron
    Eric Bandou
    Laurent Maggia
    Marie Héléne Chevallier
    Antoine Leveau
    Antoine Kremer
    Heredity, 2001, 87 : 497 - 507
  • [23] High genetic diversity and contrasting fine-scale spatial genetic structure in four seasonally dry tropical forest tree species
    Rosane Garcia Collevatti
    Raquel Estolano
    Marina Lopes Ribeiro
    Suelen Gonçalves Rabelo
    Elizangela J. Lima
    Cássia B. R. Munhoz
    Plant Systematics and Evolution, 2014, 300 : 1671 - 1681
  • [24] High genetic diversity and contrasting fine-scale spatial genetic structure in four seasonally dry tropical forest tree species
    Collevatti, Rosane Garcia
    Estolano, Raquel
    Ribeiro, Marina Lopes
    Rabelo, Suelen Goncalves
    Lima, Elizangela J.
    Munhoz, Cassia B. R.
    PLANT SYSTEMATICS AND EVOLUTION, 2014, 300 (07) : 1671 - 1681
  • [25] Fine-scale habitat preferences and habitat partitioning by three mycophagous mammals in tropical wet sclerophyll forest, north-eastern Australia
    Vernes, K
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2003, 28 (05) : 471 - 479
  • [26] Lianas and soil nutrients predict fine-scale distribution of above-ground biomass in a tropical moist forest
    Ledo, Alicia
    Illian, Janine B.
    Schnitzer, Stefan A.
    Wright, S. Joseph
    Dalling, James W.
    Burslem, David F. R. P.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2016, 104 (06) : 1819 - 1828
  • [27] Testing species abundance distribution models in tropical forest successions: Implications for fine-scale passive restoration
    Villa, Pedro Manuel
    Martins, Sebastiao Venancio
    Rodrigues, Alice Cristina
    Hissa Safar, Nathalia Vieira
    Castro Bonilla, Michael Alejandro
    Ali, Arshad
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2019, 135 : 28 - 35
  • [28] Changes in fine-scale spatial genetic structure related to protection status in Atlantic Rain Forest fragment
    Borges, D. B.
    Mariano-Neto, E.
    Caribe, D. S.
    Correa, R. X.
    Gaiotto, F. A.
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2020, 53
  • [29] Gene flow and fine-scale spatial genetic structure in Cabralea canjerana (Meliaceae), a common tree species from the Brazilian Atlantic forest
    de Oliveira Melo, Arthur Tavares
    Franceschinelli, Edivani Villaron
    JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2016, 32 : 135 - 145
  • [30] Fine-scale Spatial Genetic Structure of Ten Dipterocarp Tree Species in a Bornean Rain Forest
    Harata, Tsuyoshi
    Nanami, Satoshi
    Yamakura, Takuo
    Matsuyama, Shuhei
    Chong, Lucy
    Diway, Bibian M.
    Tan, Sylvester
    Itoh, Akira
    BIOTROPICA, 2012, 44 (05) : 586 - 594