Literature DB >> 32304221

Linking patterns and processes of tree community assembly across spatial scales in tropical montane forests.

Guillermo Bañares-de-Dios1, Manuel J Macía2,3, Íñigo Granzow-de la Cerda1, Itziar Arnelas4, Gabriel Martins de Carvalho1, Carlos I Espinosa5, Norma Salinas6,7, Nathan G Swenson8, Luis Cayuela1.   

Abstract

Many studies have tried to assess the role of both deterministic and stochastic processes in community assembly, yet a lack of consensus exists on which processes are more prevalent and at which spatial scales they operate. To shed light on this issue, we tested two nonmutually exclusive, scale-dependent hypotheses: (1) that competitive exclusion dominates at small spatial scales; and (2) that environmental filtering does so at larger ones. To accomplish this, we studied the functional patterns of tropical montane forest communities along two altitudinal gradients, in Ecuador and Peru, using floristic and functional data from 60 plots of 0.1 ha. We found no evidence of either functional overdispersion or clustering at small spatial scales, but we did find functional clustering at larger ones. The observed pattern of clustering, consistent with an environmental filtering process, was more evident when maximizing the environmental differences among any pair of plots. To strengthen the link between the observed community functional pattern and the underlying process of environmental filtering, we explored differences in the climatic preferences of the most abundant species found at lower and higher elevations and examined whether their abundances shifted along the elevation gradient. We found (1) that greater community functional differences (observed between lower and upper tropical montane forest assemblies) were mostly the result of strong climatic preferences, maintained across the Neotropics; and (2) that the abundances of such species shifted along the elevational gradient. Our findings support the conclusion that, at large spatial scales, environmental filtering is the overriding mechanism for community assembly, because the pattern of functional clustering was linked to species' similarities in their climatic preferences, which ultimately resulted in shifts in species abundances along the gradient. However, there was no evidence of competitive exclusion at more homogeneous, smaller spatial scales, where plant species effectively compete for resources.
© 2020 by the Ecological Society of America.

Keywords:  altitudinal gradients; community assembly; competitive exclusion; environmental filtering; functional traits; spatial scale; tropical montane forest

Year:  2020        PMID: 32304221     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3058

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  3 in total

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Authors:  Wei-Bo Du; Peng Jia; Guo-Zhen Du
Journal:  Plant Divers       Date:  2021-05-07

2.  FunAndes - A functional trait database of Andean plants.

Authors:  Selene Báez; Luis Cayuela; Manuel J Macía; Esteban Álvarez-Dávila; Amira Apaza-Quevedo; Itziar Arnelas; Natalia Baca-Cortes; Guillermo Bañares de Dios; Marijn Bauters; Celina Ben Saadi; Cecilia Blundo; Marian Cabrera; Felipe Castaño; Leslie Cayola; Julia G de Aledo; Carlos Iván Espinosa; Belén Fadrique; William Farfán-Rios; Alfredo Fuentes; Claudia Garnica-Díaz; Mailyn González; Diego González; Isabell Hensen; Ana Belén Hurtado; Oswaldo Jadán; Denis Lippok; M Isabel Loza; Carla Maldonado; Lucio Malizia; Laura Matas-Granados; Jonathan A Myers; Natalia Norden; Imma Oliveras Menor; Kerstin Pierick; Hirma Ramírez-Angulo; Beatriz Salgado-Negret; Matthias Schleuning; Miles Silman; María Elena Solarte-Cruz; J Sebastián Tello; Hans Verbeeck; Emilio Vilanova; Greta Weithmann; Jürgen Homeier
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-08-20       Impact factor: 8.501

3.  Morphological Differences in Pinus strobiformis Across Latitudinal and Elevational Gradients.

Authors:  Alejandro Leal-Sáenz; Kristen M Waring; Mitra Menon; Samuel A Cushman; Andrew Eckert; Lluvia Flores-Rentería; José Ciro Hernández-Díaz; Carlos Antonio López-Sánchez; José Hugo Martínez-Guerrero; Christian Wehenkel
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2020-10-22       Impact factor: 5.753

  3 in total

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