A matter of scale: Local biotic differentiation and potential regional homogenization of understory plant communities in a highly fragmented tropical landscape

IF 1.3 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Jean M. Freitag Kramer , Jhéssica L. Bald , Jaqueline de Lima Pessato , Fabiane Maziero Kupas , Carina Kozera , Victor P. Zwiener
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Plant communities in highly fragmented tropical landscapes can undergo biotic homogenization and differentiation after land-use changes, such as forest fragmentation. Here we evaluated the beta diversity of understory plant communities in fragmented forest remnants and assessed species geographic distribution to infer potential local and regional scale dependency of homogenization and differentiation pathways in the Atlantic Forest in southern Brazil. More specifically we assessed: (i) community composition; (ii) the frequency of locally rare species, generalists, interior and edge specialists; (iii) the relative contribution of beta diversity components; and (iv) the influence of widely, intermediate and narrowly distributed species to the observed patterns. Understory communities were sampled in a nested design with plots allocated to the interior and edge of forest fragments, and geographic distributions were estimated based on occurrence records from herbaria collections. Our results revealed differences in species composition among fragments and habitat types (edge and interior). Most of the sampled species were classified as locally rare. The turnover component of beta diversity explained a higher proportion of variation in species composition among fragments and habitats. Species richness and abundance were higher in the interior of fragments and most of the recorded species in the study had a wide geographic distribution. Our results support a local community differentiation (high beta diversity) among fragments and habitat types and suggest a potential regional homogenization, given the predominance of widely distributed generalist species in a domain historically characterized by high levels of endemism. We recommend urgent protection and restoration actions on the few remaining fragments of the Atlantic Forest given that each remnant can support different plant assemblages that have been increasingly threatened. Future studies should explicitly consider multiple spatial and temporal scales across fragmented tropical landscapes to better understand links with biotic homogenization and differentiation of ecological communities.

尺度问题:高度破碎化的热带景观中林下植物群落的局部生物分化和潜在的区域同质化
高度破碎化的热带景观植物群落在森林破碎化等土地利用变化后可能经历生物同质化和分化。本文通过对巴西南部大西洋森林中破碎森林残余物中林下植物群落的beta多样性进行评估,并对物种地理分布进行评估,以推断同质化和分化途径的潜在局部和区域尺度依赖性。更具体地说,我们评估了:(1)社区组成;(ii)本地稀有物种、通才、内部及边缘专才的出现频率;(iii)多样性成分的相对贡献;分布广泛、中间和狭窄的物种对观察到的格局的影响。采用巢式取样法对林下群落进行取样,将样地划分在森林破碎片的内部和边缘,并根据植物标本的发生记录估算林下群落的地理分布。结果表明,不同生境类型(边缘生境和内部生境)的物种组成存在差异。大部分取样物种被列为本地稀有物种。β -多样性的周转分量解释了物种组成在不同片段和生境间的较大变异比例。物种丰富度和丰度在碎片内部较高,大部分记录物种具有广泛的地理分布。我们的研究结果支持了片段和生境类型之间的局部群落分化(高β多样性),并表明了潜在的区域同质化,因为在一个历史上以高度地方性为特征的领域中,广泛分布的通才物种占主导地位。鉴于每一片残存的大西洋森林都能支持不同的植物群落,因此我们建议采取紧急保护和恢复行动。未来的研究应明确考虑破碎热带景观的多个时空尺度,以更好地了解生物同质化和生态群落分化之间的联系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
57
审稿时长
>0 weeks
期刊介绍: Acta Oecologica is venue for the publication of original research articles in ecology. We encourage studies in all areas of ecology, including ecosystem ecology, community ecology, population ecology, conservation ecology and evolutionary ecology. There is no bias with respect to taxon, biome or geographic area. Both theoretical and empirical papers are welcome, but combinations are particularly sought. Priority is given to papers based on explicitly stated hypotheses. Acta Oecologica also accepts review papers.
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