Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15726
Title: The importance of hydraulic architecture to the distribution patterns of trees in a central Amazonian forest
Authors: Cosme, Luiza H.M.
Schietti, Juliana
Costa, Flávia Regina Capellotto
Oliveira, Rafael S.
Keywords: Anatomy
Climate Change
Community Composition
Eco-hydrology
Environmental Conditions
Functional Role
Growth
Height
Hydraulic Conductivity
Leaf Area
Microhabitat
Niche Partitioning
Resource Allocation
Spatial Distribution
Topography
Trade-off
Tree
Tropical Forest
Wood
Amazonia
Water
Anatomy And Histology
Ecosystem
Metabolism
Physiology
Population Dynamics
Principal Component Analysis
Species Difference
Tree
Xylem
Ecosystem
Population Dynamics
Principal Component Analysis
Species Specificity
Trees
Water
Xylem
Issue Date: 2017
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: New Phytologist
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 215, Número 1, Pags. 113-125
Abstract: Species distributions and assemblage composition may be the result of trait selection through environmental filters. Here, we ask whether filtering of species at the local scale could be attributed to their hydraulic architectural traits, revealing the basis of hydrological microhabitat partitioning in a Central Amazonian forest. We analyzed the hydraulic characteristics at tissue (anatomical traits, wood specific gravity (WSG)), organ (leaf area, specific leaf area (SLA), leaf area : sapwood area ratio) and whole-plant (height) levels for 28 pairs of congeneric species from 14 genera restricted to either valleys or plateaus of a terra-firme forest in Central Amazonia. On plateaus, species had higher WSG, but lower mean vessel area, mean vessel hydraulic diameter, sapwood area and SLA than in valleys; traits commonly associated with hydraulic safety. Mean vessel hydraulic diameter and mean vessel area increased with height for both habitats, but leaf area and leaf area : sapwood area ratio investments with tree height declined in valley vs plateau species. [Correction added after online publication 29 March 2017: the preceding sentence has been reworded.] Two strategies for either efficiency or safety were detected, based on vessel size or allocation to sapwood. In conclusion, contrasting hydrological conditions act as environmental filters, generating differences in species composition at the local scale. This has important implications for the prediction of species distributions under future climate change scenarios. © 2017 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2017 New Phytologist Trust
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/nph.14508
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