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Australian Tropical and Subtropical Rain Forest Community Assembly: Phylogeny,Functional Biogeography,and Environmental Gradients
Authors:Robert Kooyman  Maurizio Rossetto  Chris Allen  William Cornwell
Institution:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, , 2109 NSW, Australia;2. National Herbarium of New South Wales, the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust, , 2000 Sydney, NSW, Australia;3. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, Systems Ecology, , 1085 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:To compare community assemblage patterns in tropical northeastern and subtropical central eastern Australia across selected gradients and scales, we tested the relationship of species traits with phylogenetic structure, and niche breadth. We considered phylogenetic relationships across current‐day species in assemblages in relation to rain forest species pool sizes, and trait values along gradients including elevation and latitude. Trait values were quantified across scales for seed size, leaf area, wood density and maximum height at maturity for 1137 species and 596 assemblages using trait gradient analysis (TGA). Local assemblages of subtropical species had narrower trait ranges, and higher niche breadth values than corresponding assemblages of tropical species. Leaf size and seed size increased at low latitudes, and community phylogenetic structure was most strongly correlated with seed traits in the subtropics, reflecting dispersal and re‐colonization processes. Elevation accounted for little of the variance in community phylogenetic structure or trait variation across local and regional scales. Stable moist forest areas retained many species from ancestral rain forest lineages across a range of temporally conserved habitats; species within assemblages were less related; and rain forest assemblages had higher functional diversity, but lower niche breadth. This suggests that on average, assemblages of species in stable areas had greater trait variation and narrower distributions. Historic and recent rain forest contraction and re‐expansion can result in recolonized areas that are dominated by species that are more related (phylogenetically) than by chance, have smaller, widely dispersed seeds, and greater niche breadth (broader distributions).
Keywords:Australia  community phylogenetic structure  environmental gradients  functional traits  niche breadth  rain forest  scale  seed size
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