Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16559
Title: Islands in a green ocean: Spatially structured endemism in Amazonian white-sand vegetation
Authors: Costa, Flavio Magalhães
Terra-Araujo, Mário Henrique
Zartman, Charles Eugene
Cornelius, Cintia
Carvalho, Fernanda Antunes
Hopkins, Michael John Gilbert
Viana, Pedro Lage
Prata, Eduardo Magalhães Borges
Vicentini, Alberto
Keywords: Biodiversity
Conservation Planning
Dry Forest
Endemism
Island Biogeography
Savanna
Spatial Distribution
Species Richness
Tropical Forest
Amazon Basin
Tracheophyta
Issue Date: 2020
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Biotropica
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 52, Número 1, Pags. 34-45
Abstract: Here, we examine the influence of the spatial distribution of open white-sand campina (WSC) in the Amazon on the species richness and beta diversity of their vascular plants. It is well known that beta diversity tends to increase with geographical distance, but the influence of habitat insularity on floristic composition and endemism is still unclear. We surveyed WSC in central and southwestern Amazon, generating lists of species occurrences by rapid-inventory techniques to evaluate the influence of island area and connectivity on alpha and beta diversity among five landscapes in the Amazon Basin. Effects of insularity were assessed by comparing alpha and beta diversity within and among landscapes. A high proportion of species (~74%) and genera (~50%) were restricted to only one of the five landscapes and only three species and 28 genera were shared among all landscapes. At the regional scale, beta diversity increased significantly with distance. Partitioning of beta diversity showed that landscapes of higher connectivity have greater turnover and lower nestedness. We conclude that the flora of WSC is highly structured at regional scales, while at the local scale structure is evident only in low connectivity landscapes. Landscape metrics apparently play an important role in shaping patterns of diversity regionally as a result of processes operating at larger geographical scales. This emphasizes that conservation policy should not be local in its geographical focus and should account for connectivity at larger scales. This study is the first to empirically and explicitly evaluate the pattern of endemism in lowland WSC in the Amazon. Abstract in Porteges is available with online only. © 2019 The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/btp.12732
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