Estación Biológica Cocha Cashu

Examining variation in the leaf mass per area of dominant species across two contrasting tropical gradients in light of community assembly

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Revista Científica:

Ecology and Evolution

Año:

2016

Volumen:

6

Número:

16

Páginas:

5674-5689

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2281

ISSN:

2045-7758

Keywords (Autor):

Community assembly, environmental filtering, interspecific variation, intraspecific variation, leaf mass per area, limiting similarity, tropical forests, T-statistics.

Resumen

Understanding variation in key functional traits across gradients in high diversity systems and the ecology of community changes along gradients in these systems is crucial in light of conservation and climate change. We examined inter- and intraspecific variation in leaf mass per area (LMA) of sun and shade leaves along a 3330-m elevation gradient in Peru, and in sun leaves across a forest–savanna vegetation gradient in Brazil. We also compared LMA variance ratios (T-statistics metrics) to null models to explore internal (i.e., abiotic) and environmental filtering on community structure along the gradients. Community-weighted LMA increased with decreasing forest cover in Brazil, likely due to increased light availability and water stress, and increased with elevation in Peru, consistent with the leaf economic spectrum strategy expected in colder, less productive environments. A very high species turnover was observed along both environmental gradients, and consequently, the first source of variation in LMA was species turnover. Variation in LMA at the genus or family levels was greater in Peru than in Brazil. Using dominant trees to examine possible filters on community assembly, we found that in Brazil, internal filtering was strongest in the forest, while environmental filtering was observed in the dry savanna. In Peru, internal filtering was observed along 80% of the gradient, perhaps due to variation in taxa or interspecific competition. Environmental filtering was observed at cloud zone edges and in lowlands, possibly due to water and nutrient availability, respectively. These results related to variation in LMA indicate that biodiversity in species rich tropical assemblages may be structured by differential niche-based processes. In the future, specific mechanisms generating these patterns of variation in leaf functional traits across tropical environmental gradients should be explored.

Copyright:

© 2016 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Autor (es ):

Neyret Margot , Patrick Bentley Lisa , Oliveras Imma , Marimon Beatriz S. , Marimon-Junior Ben Hur ,Almeida de Oliveira Edmar , Barbosa Passos Fábio ,Castro Ccoscco Rosa ,Santos Josias , Matias Reis Simone , Morandi Paulo S. , Rayme Paucar Gloria , Robles Cáceres Arturo, Valdez-Tejeira Yolvi , Yllanes Choque Yovana , Salinas Norma , Shenkin Alexander, Asner Gregory P. , Díaz Sandra, Enquist Brian J., Malhi Yadvinder

Editorial:

John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Ciudad:

Maidstone, Reino Unido

Idioma:

Inglés

Tipo de Referencia:

Articulo de revista academica

Investigadores: