Literature DB >> 27039518

Land-use intensification effects on functional properties in tropical plant communities.

Geovana Carreño-Rocabado, Marielos Peña-Claros, Frans Bongers, Sandra Díaz, Fabien Quetier, José Chuviña, Lourens Poorter.   

Abstract

There is consensus that plant diversity and ecosystem processes are negatively affected by land-use intensification (LUI), but, at the same time, there is empirical evidence that a large heterogeneity can be found in the responses. This heterogeneity is especially poorly understood in tropical ecosystems. We evaluated changes in community functional properties across five common land-use types in the wet tropics with different land-use intensity: mature forest, logged forest, secondary forest, agricultural land, and pastureland, located in the lowlands of Bolivia. For the dominant plant species, we measured 12 functional response traits related to their life history, acquisition and conservation of resources, plant domestication, and breeding. We used three single-trait metrics to describe community functional properties: community abundance-weighted mean (CWM) traits values, coefficient of variation, and kurtosis of distribution. The CWM of all 12 traits clearly responded to LUI. Overall, we found that an increase in LUI resulted in communities dominated by plants with acquisitive leaf trait values. However, contrary to our expectations, secondary forests had more conservative trait values (i.e., lower specific leaf area) than mature and logged forest, probably because they were dominated by palm species. Functional variation peaked at intermediate land-use intensity (high coefficient of variation and low kurtosis), which included secondary forest but, unexpectedly, also agricultural land, which is an intensely managed system. The high functional variation of these systems is due to a combination of how response traits (and species) are filtered out by biophysical filters and how management practices introduced a range of exotic species and their trait values into the local species pool. Our results showed that, at local scales and depending on prevailing environmental and management practices, LUI does not necessarily result in communities with more acquisitive trait values or with less functional variation. Instead of the widely expected negative impacts of LUI on plant diversity, we found varying responses of functional variation, with possible repercussions on many ecosystem services. These findings provide a background for actively mitigating negative effects of LUI while meeting the needs of local communities that rely mainly on provisioning ecosystem services for their livelihoods.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27039518     DOI: 10.1890/14-0340

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecol Appl        ISSN: 1051-0761            Impact factor:   4.657


  2 in total

1.  Changes in taxonomic and functional diversity of plants in a chronosequence of Eucalyptus grandis plantations.

Authors:  Pamela E Pairo; Estela E Rodriguez; M Isabel Bellocq; Pablo G Aceñolaza
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Imaging spectroscopy reveals the effects of topography and logging on the leaf chemistry of tropical forest canopy trees.

Authors:  Tom Swinfield; Sabine Both; Terhi Riutta; Boris Bongalov; Dafydd Elias; Noreen Majalap-Lee; Nicholas Ostle; Martin Svátek; Jakub Kvasnica; David Milodowski; Tommaso Jucker; Robert M Ewers; Yi Zhang; David Johnson; Yit Arn Teh; David F R P Burslem; Yadvinder Malhi; David Coomes
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2019-12-17       Impact factor: 10.863

  2 in total

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