Title
Scale-dependent drivers of the phylogenetic structure and similarity of tree communities in northwestern Amazonia
Date Issued
01 February 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
González-Caro S.
Duivenvoorden J.F.
Balslev H.
Cavelier J.
Macía M.J.
Romero-Saltos H.
Sánchez M.
Valencia R.
Duque Á.
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
The extent to which historical dispersal, environmental features and geographical barriers shape the phylogenetic structure and turnover of tree communities in northwestern Amazonia at multiple spatial scales remains poorly understood. We used 85 floristically standardized 0.1-ha plots (DBH ≥ 2.5 cm) distributed in three subregions of northwestern (NW) Amazonia across three main habitat types (floodplain, swamp and terra firme forests) to hypothesize that (a) historical dispersal overcome geographical barriers, which meant low local phylogenetic relatedness and low phylogenetic turnover. (b) Geographical barriers triggered dispersal limitation, causing high local and subregional phylogenetic clustering and high regional phylogenetic turnover. (c) Edaphic properties and flooding were negatively associated with stem size and determined the tree phylogenetic structure and turnover at local and regional scales in Amazon forests. We found that the extent to which environmental or evolutionary features shaped the phylogenetic structure and phylogenetic similarity of tree communities in NW Amazonia was scale dependent. Specifically, we show that the relative importance of environmental factors increases as spatial scale and species pool decreases. Furthermore, we find that these results are generally robust for both adult and juvenile trees. Synthesis. Our analysis at the regional (NW Amazon) scale lends support to the idea of Amazonian forests as a large meta-community primarily structured by historical dispersal at large spatial scales with an increasing importance of environmental factors at finer spatial scales. The convergence of ancestral lineages across habitat types may have been due to the relatively recent formation of geographical barriers that promoted local isolation and allopatric speciation.
Start page
888
End page
899
Volume
109
Issue
2
Language
English
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85096715098
Source
Journal of Ecology
ISSN of the container
00220477
Sponsor(s)
S.G.-C. was supported by the Instituto de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovaci?n de Colombia?COLCIENCIAS grant (announcement 785). ?.D. was funded by NWO grant from The Netherlands (Budgetnr 8011) to visit the University of Amsterdam as invited researcher. Fieldwork, lab and herbarium analyses were supported by the European Committee (ERB IC18 CT960038), WOTRO (WB 85-335) and Fundaci?n Tropenbos Colombia. We are indebted to Peter Kennedy for his comments and language correction to the manuscript. The comments and suggestions made by C. Baraloto, P. Zuidema and one anonymous reviewer significantly helped to enhance the quality of the manuscript. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus