Julia Arieira, Karl-L Schuchmann, Arnildo Pott, Michelle D Lanssanova, Ana Silvia O Tissiani, Osvaldo Borges Pinto Junior, Marinêz Isaac Marques
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study investigated the influences of regional climate and soil moisture conditions on the vegetative and reproductive cycles of seven savanna and forest vegetation communities of the Pantanal Mato-grossense. Circular analysis of the phenological data revealed the occurrence of interspecific synchronism and seasonal responses in vegetative and reproductive activities, with flowering patterns differing the most between communities. Leaf shedding intensity events in communities were closely linked to climatic seasonality. Over half of the individuals were semideciduous or deciduous, with leaf drop intense events predominantly triggered by drier, warmer conditions. The annual flood pulse further constrains woody plants, influencing deciduousness and serving as a strategy to mitigate soil water stress. The preceding climatic signal announcing cold fronts was a relevant determinant of flowering events for many communities. Climate and soil seasonality had limited influences on fruiting phenology across the various vegetation communities. The asynchronous response of phenological cycles to surface soil moisture seasonality highlights the diverse habitat hydrodynamics and its interactions with the plant communities that may decouple leaf fall, flowering, and fruiting from surface soil water availability. The unique phenological response of the Pantanal's woody communities to the hydro-climatic cycle sets it apart from other non-flooded savannas of tropical South America. This response involves the intricate interplay between phenological dynamism and alternating drought and wet-flooded phases.
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