263 research outputs found
Tropical savannas and dry forests
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordIn the tropics, research, conservation and public attention focus on rain forests, but this neglects that half of the global tropics have a seasonally dry climate. These regions are home to dry forests and savannas (Figures 1 and 2), and are the focus of this Primer. The attention given to rain forests is understandable. Their high species diversity, sheer stature and luxuriance thrill biologists today as much as they did the first explorers in the Age of Discovery. Although dry forest and savanna may make less of a first impression, they support a fascinating diversity of plant strategies to cope with stress and disturbance including fire, drought and herbivory. Savannas played a fundamental role in human evolution, and across Africa and India they support iconic megafauna. Pennington et al. introduce seasonally dry biomes in the tropics – savannahs and dry forests
Biogeographic Barriers in the Andes: Is the Amotape—Huancabamba Zone a Dispersal Barrier for Dry Forest Plants?
This is the final version of the article. Available from Missouri Botanical Garden Press via the DOI in this record.We investigate whether the Amotape—Huancabamba zone in the Andes acts as a barrier or corridor for plant species migration. We test this hypothesis based on data on trees, shrubs, and herbs collected in dry inter-Andean valleys (DIAVs) of Ecuador. We found that 72% of the species cross the Amotape—Huancabamba zone in a north—south direction and 13% of the species cross the Andes in an east—west direction. Southern DIAVs concentrate the highest numbers of endemic species. At the regional level we found that 43% of the species are exclusively Andean, while the remaining 57% are found in the Pacific lowlands, the Caribbean, and Mesoamerica. These results showing many species crossing the Amotape—Huancabamba zone in a north—south direction and also frequently found in neighboring lowland and highland ecosystems suggest that the Amotape—Huancabamba zone acts as a corridor for species migration of dry inter-Andean flora.This research was funded by the
SENESCYT scholarship “Convocatoria 2011,” the Oticon Foundation, Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Ecuador, and
SYNTHESYS research visiting grant 201
History and geography of neotropical tree diversity
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Annual Reviews via the DOI in this record Early botanical explorers invoked biogeographic history to explain the remarkable tree diversity of Neotropical forests. In this context, we review the history of Neotropical tree diversity over the past 100 million years, focusing on biomes with significant tree diversity. We evaluate hypotheses for rain forest origins, intercontinental disjunctions, and models of Neotropical tree diversification. To assess the impact of biotic interchange on the Amazon tree flora, we examined biogeographic histories of trees in Ecuador's Yasuní Forest, which suggest that nearly 50% of its species descend from immigrant lineages that colonized South America during the Cenozoic. Long-distance and intercontinental dispersal, combined with trait filtering and niche evolution, are important factors in the community assembly of Neotropical forests. We evaluate the role of pre-Columbian people on Neotropical tree diversity and discuss the future of Neotropical forests in the Anthropocene.NASANSFNatural Environment Research CouncilNERC NewtonFAPESPOrganization for Tropical StudiesNEscen
Plants, people and long‐term ecological monitoring in the tropics
This special issue focuses on long-term ecological monitoring in the tropics, with a particular focus, appropriate to Plants, People, Planet, on what it can offer both to local people and decision makers in tropical countries. Two of the contributed papers emphasise the role that long-term, permanent monitoring plots can play in bringing together researchers, policymakers and communities, based on examples from Peru and Colombia (Baker et al., Norden et al.). The articles also highlight new plot-based methods for monitoring the neglected tropical dry biomes of savannas and dry forests (The SEOSAW Partnership; Moonlight et al.) and new methods for field-based monitoring of habitat degradation (Ahrends et al.) and the distribution of large trees (Harris et al.). Overall, the issue demonstrates that sustainable management of tropical environments requires long-term, ground-based monitoring that engages with the communities and institutions that manage these landscapes
Freezing and water availability structure the evolutionary diversity of trees across the Americas
The historical course of evolutionary diversification shapes the current distribution of biodiversity, but the main forces constraining diversification are still a subject of debate. We unveil the evolutionary structure of tree species assemblages across the Americas to assess whether an inability to move or an inability to evolve is the predominant constraint in plant diversification and biogeography. We find a fundamental divide in tree lineage composition between tropical and extratropical environments, defined by the absence versus presence of freezing temperatures. Within the Neotropics, we uncover a further evolutionary split between moist and dry forests. Our results demonstrate that American tree lineages tend to retain their ancestral environmental relationships and that phylogenetic niche conservatism is the primary force structuring the distribution of tree biodiversity. Our study establishes the pervasive importance of niche conservatism to community assembly even at intercontinental scales
The Origins and Historical Assembly of the Brazilian Caatinga Seasonally Dry Tropical Forests
This is the final version. Available on open access from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this recordData Availability Statement:
The datasets presented in this study can be found in online repositories. The names of the repository/repositories and accession number(s) can be found in the article/Supplementary Material.The Brazilian Caatinga is considered the richest nucleus of the Seasonally Dry Tropical Forests (SDTF) in the Neotropics, also exhibiting high levels of endemism, but the timing of origin and the evolutionary causes of its plant diversification are still poorly understood. In this study, we integrate comprehensive sampled dated molecular phylogenies of multiple flowering plant groups and estimations of ancestral areas to elucidate the forces driving diversification and historical assembly in the Caatinga flowering plants. Our results show a pervasive floristic exchange between Caatinga and other neotropical regions, particularly those adjacent. While some Caatinga lineages arose in the Eocene/Oligocene, most dry-adapted endemic plant lineages found in region emerged from the middle to late Miocene until the Pleistocene, indicating that only during this period the Caatinga started to coalesce into a SDTF like we see today. Our findings are temporally congruent with global and regional aridification events and extensive denudation of thick layers of sediments in Northeast (NE) Brazil. We hypothesize that global aridification processes have played important role in the ancient plant assembly and long-term Caatinga SDTF biome stability, whereas climate-induced vegetation shifts, as well as the newly opened habitats have largely contributed as drivers of in situ diversification in the region. Patterns of phylogenetic relatedness of Caatinga endemic clades revealed that much modern species diversity has originated in situ and likely evolved via recent (Pliocene/Pleistocene) ecological specialization triggered by increased environmental heterogeneity and the exhumation of edaphically disparate substrates. The continuous assembly of dry-adapted flora of the Caatinga has been complex, adding to growing evidence that the origins and historical assembly of the distinct SDTF patches are idiosyncratic across the Neotropics, driven not just by continental-scale processes but also by unique features of regional-scale geological history
Toward diverse seed sourcing to upscale ecological restoration in the Brazilian Cerrado
This is the final version. Available from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this record. Data availability statement:
The original contributions presented in the study are included
in the article/Supplementary material, further inquiries can
be directed to the corresponding author.Seed markets are vital to scaling up ecosystem restoration in the Brazilian
Cerrado, home of the world’s most species-rich grasslands and savannas.
We compiled lists of species traded by four major Cerrado seed supply
systems to investigate the representativeness of the species currently available
for seed-based restoration. We also identified whether dominant groundlayer species are being sourced for seed production. Seeds from 263 Cerrado
species can be purchased for restoration, of which 68% are trees, particularly
legumes (24%). 63% of the traded species were found in only one seed
supply system. The five most dominant graminoids of the Cerrado ground
layer were available for sale, but two additional species uncommon in oldgrowth areas represented 44% of the sales of a key seed trader in Central
Brazil. The expansion of Cerrado seed supply systems should be supported to
further increase the number of species on the market. Sourcing seeds from
a diversity of herbaceous species is central to facilitating the restoration of
species-rich grasslands and savannas in the Cerrado. Recovering the diversity
and functioning of old-growth open ecosystems through seeds will depend
on increasing the supply and demand for species typical of Cerrado’s ground
layerNatural Environment Research CouncilNatural Environment Research CouncilNatural Environment Research CouncilExeter Alumni MS PhD scholarshipCNPqCNPqCNPqFAPES
Mapping the root systems of individual trees in a natural community using genotyping-by-sequencing
•The architecture of root systems is an important driver of plant fitness, competition and ecosystem processes. However, the methodological difficulty of mapping roots hampers the study of these processes. Existing approaches to match individual plants to belowground samples are low throughput and species specific. Here, we developed a scalable sequencing-based method to map the root systems of individual trees across multiple species. We successfully applied it to a tropical dry forest community in the Brazilian Caatinga containing 14 species. • We sequenced all 42 individual shrubs and trees in a 14 × 14 m plot using double-digest restriction site-associated sequencing (ddRADseq). We identified species-specific markers and individual-specific haplotypes from the data. We matched these markers to the ddRADseq data from 100 mixed root samples from across the centre (10 × 10 m) of the plot at four different depths using a newly developed R package. • We identified individual root samples for all species and all but one individual. There was a strong significant correlation between belowground and aboveground size measurements, and we also detected significant species-level root-depth preference for two species. • The method is more scalable and less labour intensive than the current techniques and is broadly applicable to ecology, forestry and agricultural biology
Shade alters savanna grass layer structure and function along a gradient of canopy cover
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData availability statement:
Data used for this study are available as supporting information.Aim: In savannas, a grass-dominated ground layer is key to ecosystem function via grass–fire feedbacks that maintain open ecosystems. With woody encroachment, tree density increases, thereby decreasing light in the ground layer and potentially altering ecosystem function. We investigated how light availability can filter individual grass species distributions and whether different functional traits are associated with response to a shade gradient in a landscape experiencing woody encroachment. Location: Savanna–forest mosaic in the Cerrado domain, southeastern Brazil. Methods: Along an encroachment gradient of increasing tree leaf area index (LAI) and shade, we determined how changing light availability alters grass diversity and ground layer structure relative to grass cover and grass functional traits (photosynthetic pathway, underground storage organs, bud protection and traits related to grass shape, size and leaf dimensions). Results: Increasing shade led to a decrease in grass cover and grass species richness, and also compositional and functional changes. We found that where tree LAI reached 1, grass cover was reduced by 50% and species richness by 30%. While C4 grass species abundances decreased with increasing shade, the opposite pattern was true for C3 grasses. There were only small differences in light preferences among C4 subtypes, with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) species tolerating slightly more shaded conditions. Persistence of some C4 species under more shaded conditions was possible, likely due to an ability to store starch reserves via underground storage organs. Conclusions: Woody encroachment changes diversity and structure of the grassy layer that is critical to the functioning of savanna ecosystems, highlighting the dependence of the diverse grass layer on open and sunny conditions. Our results suggest a threshold of tree cover close to LAI ≈ 1 as being critical to cerrado grassy layer conservation.National Science Foundation (NSF)São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)National Council for Scientific and Technological DevelopmentCoordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES
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