首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Functional assembly of tropical montane tree islands in the Atlantic Forest is shaped by stress tolerance,bamboo presence,and facilitation
Authors:Tina Christmann  Bruno H P Rosado  Guillaume Delhaye  Ilaíne S Matos  Julia S Drummond  Helena L Roland  Yan C Moraes  Imma Oliveras Menor
Institution:1. School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford UK ; 2. Laboratório de Ecologia Vegetal, Department of Ecology, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro Brazil ; 3. Macrosystems Ecology Laboratory, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA
Abstract:AimsAmidst the Campos de Altitude (Highland Grasslands) in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, woody communities grow either clustered in tree islands or interspersed within the herbaceous matrix. The functional ecology, diversity, and biotic processes shaping these plant communities are largely unstudied. We characterized the functional assembly and diversity of these tropical montane woody communities and investigated how they fit within Grime''s CSR (C—competitor, S—stress‐tolerant, R—ruderal) scheme, what functional trade‐offs they exhibit, and how traits and functional diversity vary in response to bamboo presence/absence.MethodsTo characterize the functional composition of the community, we sampled five leaf traits and wood density along transects covering the woody communities both inside tree islands and outside (i.e., isolated woody plants in the grasslands community). Then, we used Mann–Whitney test, t test, and variation partitioning to determine the effects of inside versus outside tree island and bamboo presence on community‐weighted means, woody species diversity, and functional diversity.ResultsWe found a general SC/S strategy with drought‐related functional trade‐offs. Woody plants in tree islands had more acquisitive traits than those within the grasslands. Trait variation was mostly taxonomically than spatially driven, and species composition varied between inside and outside tree islands. Leaf thickness, wood density, and foliar water uptake were unrelated to CSR strategies, suggesting independent trait dimensions and multiple drought‐coping strategies within the predominant S strategy. Islands with bamboo presence showed lower Simpson diversity, lower functional dispersion, lower foliar water uptake, and greater leaf thickness than in tree islands without bamboo.ConclusionsThe observed functional assembly hints toward large‐scale environmental abiotic filtering shaping a stress‐tolerant community strategy, and small‐scale biotic interactions driving small‐scale trait variation. We recommend experimental studies with fire, facilitation treatments, ecophysiological and recruitment traits to elucidate on future tree island expansion and community response to climate change.
Keywords:biotic interactions  Campos de Altitude  CSR strategy  environmental filtering  tropical montane grasslands  woody communities
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号