Floristic diversity, composition and dominance across Amazonian forest types respond differently to latitude

Author:

de Aledo Julia G.12ORCID,Paneghel Mara34ORCID,Cayuela Luis5ORCID,Matas‐Granados Laura12ORCID,Saadi Celina Ben1ORCID,Salinas Norma67ORCID,La Torre‐Cuadros María de los Ángeles89ORCID,García‐Villacorta Roosevelt1011ORCID,Macía Manuel J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Biología, Área de Botánica Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Madrid Spain

2. Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio Global (CIBC‐UAM) Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Madrid Spain

3. Departamento de Ingeniería Agroforestal (EAGROF) Universidad de Lleida Lleida Spain

4. Unidad Mixta de Investigación CTFC‐AGROTECNIO‐CERCA Solsona Spain

5. Departamento de Biología y Geología, Física y Química Inorgánica Universidad Rey Juan Carlos Madrid Spain

6. Sección Química Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú Lima Peru

7. School of Geography and Environment University of Oxford Oxford UK

8. Universidad Científica del Sur Lima Peru

9. Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina Lima Peru

10. Programa Restauración de Ecosistemas, Centro de Innovación Científica Amazónica (CINCIA) Madre de Dios Peru

11. Centro Peruano para la Biodiversidad y Conservación (PCBC) Iquitos Peru

Abstract

AbstractAimThe latitudinal biodiversity gradient is considered a first‐order biogeographical pattern for most taxonomic groups. Latitudinal variation in plant diversity is not always consistent, and this could be related to the particular characteristics of different forest types. In this study, we compare latitudinal changes in floristic diversity (alpha diversity), composition (beta diversity) and dominance across different tropical forest types: floodplain, terra firme and submontane forests.LocationWestern Amazonia (Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia).TaxonWoody plants.MethodsWe inventoried 1978 species and 31,203 individuals of vascular plants with a diameter at breast height ≥ 2.5 cm in 118 0.1‐ha plots over an 1800 km latitudinal gradient in three different forest types. The relationships between alpha diversity, latitude and forest type were analysed using generalised linear mixed models. Semi‐parametric permutational multivariate analysis of variance was used to investigate the effects of latitude and forest type on beta diversity. Dominant species abundances were correlated with non‐metric multidimensional scaling ordination axes to reflect their contributions in shaping changes in beta diversity.ResultsAlpha diversity increased towards equatorial latitudes in terra firme and submontane forests but remained relatively constant in floodplains. Beta diversity of all forest types changed with latitude, although less clearly in floodplains. Also, in floodplain forests, there were fewer dominant species contributing to beta diversity and more species homogeneous along the gradient.Main ConclusionsLatitudinal diversity patterns are manifested in alpha and beta diversity since latitude summarizes climatic and edaphic changes. However, we found different responses of each forest type. In floodplain forests, inundation regime is a stronger predictor than latitude, limiting floristic diversity and composition. Changes in dominant species abundance over gradients explained species composition, but floodplain forests harboured more homogeneous dominant species than well drained forests. It is key to study environmental trends and habitat characteristics of each forest type to understand their species diversity and dominance patterns.

Funder

Consejería de Educación, Juventud y Deporte, Comunidad de Madrid

European Commission

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference90 articles.

1. A standard protocol for woody plant inventories and soil characterisation using temporary 0.1‐ha plots in tropical forests;Arellano G.;Journal of Tropical Forest Science,2016

2. Niche breadth of oligarchic species in Amazonian and Andean rain forests

3. Oligarchic patterns in tropical forests: role of the spatial extent, environmental heterogeneity and diversity

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