Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14676
Título: The Brazilian freshwater wetscape: Changes in tree community diversity and composition on climatic and geographic gradients
Autor: Wittmann, Florian Karl
Marques, Márcia Cristina Mendes
Júnior, Geraldo Damasceno D.
Budke, Jean Carlos
Piedade, Maria Teresa Fernandez
Wittmann, Astrid Oliveira de
Montero, Juan Carlos
Assis, Rafael Leandro de
Targhetta, Natália
Parolin, Pia
Junk, Wolfgang Johannes
Householder, John Ethan
Palavras-chave: Rain
Fresh Water
Biogeography
Biome
Climate
Environmental Temperature
Forest Structure
Nonhuman
Plant Community
Seasonal Variation
Species Difference
Species Diversity
Vegetation
Wetland
Biodiversity
Cluster Analysis
Forest
Regression Analysis
Temperature
Tree
Biodiversity
Climate
Cluster Analysis
Forests
Fresh Water
Rain
Regression Analysis
Temperature
Trees
Wetlands
Data do documento: 2017
Revista: PLoS ONE
É parte de: Volume 12, Número 4
Abstract: Wetlands harbor an important compliment of regional plant diversity, but in many regions data on wetland diversity and composition is still lacking, thus hindering our understanding of the processes that control it. While patterns of broad-scale terrestrial diversity and composition typically correlate with contemporary climate it is not clear to what extent patterns in wetlands are complimentary, or conflicting. To elucidate this, we consolidate data from wetland forest inventories in Brazil and examine patterns of diversity and composition along temperature and rainfall gradients spanning five biomes. We collated 196 floristic inventories covering an area >220 ha and including >260,000 woody individuals. We detected a total of 2,453 tree species, with the Amazon alone accounting for nearly half. Compositional patterns indicated differences in freshwater wetland floras among Brazilian biomes, although biomes with drier, more seasonal climates tended to have a larger proportion of more widely distributed species. Maximal alpha diversity increased with annual temperature, rainfall, and decreasing seasonality, patterns broadly consistent with upland vegetation communities. However, alpha diversity-climate relationships were only revealed at higher diversity values associated with the uppermost quantiles, and in most sites diversity varied irrespective of climate. Likewise, mean biome-level differences in alpha-diversity were unexpectedly modest, even in comparisons of savanna-area wetlands to those of nearby forested regions. We describe attenuated wetland climate-diversity relationships as a shifting balance of local and regional effects on species recruitment. Locally, excessive waterlogging strongly filters species able to colonize from regional pools. On the other hand, increased water availability can accommodate a rich community of drought-sensitive >immigrant species that are able to track buffered wetland microclimates. We argue that environmental conditions in many wetlands are not homogeneous with respect to regional climate, and that responses of wetland tree communities to future climate change may lag behind that of non-wetland, terrestrial habitat. © 2017 Wittmann et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0175003
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