Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia

Aim: To test whether a direct relationship exists between the relative abundance of woody plant genera and precipitation regime along the north-south climate gradient of the western Amazonia. Location: Lowland rain forests in the western Amazon. Methods: Floristic data on 91 woody plant genera, from...

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Egile Nagusiak: Butt, N, Malhi, Y, Phillips, O, New, M
Formatua: Journal article
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua: Blackwell Publishing 2008
Gaiak:
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author Butt, N
Malhi, Y
Phillips, O
New, M
author_facet Butt, N
Malhi, Y
Phillips, O
New, M
author_sort Butt, N
collection OXFORD
description Aim: To test whether a direct relationship exists between the relative abundance of woody plant genera and precipitation regime along the north-south climate gradient of the western Amazonia. Location: Lowland rain forests in the western Amazon. Methods: Floristic data on 91 woody plant genera, from 39 0.1-ha plots across the western Amazon, and precipitation data from a 0.5° global data set were used to test for correlations between plant relative abundance (defined as percentage number of stems ≥ 2.5 cm diameter at breast height for each woody plant genus per plot) and derived dry-season variables. Moisture preference was then assessed in terms of pioneer and shade-tolerant life-history strategy. Results: There were significant associations between the distribution of plant relative abundances and seasonal precipitation variables in 34% of genera analysed. Significant differences were identified in size-class distribution between dry affiliates and generalists. Dry affiliates were not dominant in any size class in any plot type, whereas climate generalists dominated most of the size classes in the dry plots and the mid-range size classes in the wet plots. Dry-affiliate genera were a minority, even in dry forests. Wet-affiliate genera were correlated with shade tolerance, whereas genera with no rainfall affiliation were often pioneers. Main conclusions: The results suggest that moisture variable seasonality influences community composition in a manner than can be related to the life-history trade-off between shade tolerance and pioneer ranking. One possible reason for higher diversity in wetter forests is that high rainfall amplifies the niche space available to shade-tolerant plants. Determining which plant groups are constrained by which environmental variables can contribute to our understanding of how forest composition may be changing now, and how it may change under future climate: if shade-tolerant trees are also drought-intolerant, community structure in wet forests may be more vulnerable to future increases in moisture stress.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7a3adb5a-7a1e-4f81-9654-519f3cf41f472022-03-26T20:42:35ZFloristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western AmazoniaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7a3adb5a-7a1e-4f81-9654-519f3cf41f47Climate systems and policyEnvironmentEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetBlackwell Publishing2008Butt, NMalhi, YPhillips, ONew, MAim: To test whether a direct relationship exists between the relative abundance of woody plant genera and precipitation regime along the north-south climate gradient of the western Amazonia. Location: Lowland rain forests in the western Amazon. Methods: Floristic data on 91 woody plant genera, from 39 0.1-ha plots across the western Amazon, and precipitation data from a 0.5° global data set were used to test for correlations between plant relative abundance (defined as percentage number of stems ≥ 2.5 cm diameter at breast height for each woody plant genus per plot) and derived dry-season variables. Moisture preference was then assessed in terms of pioneer and shade-tolerant life-history strategy. Results: There were significant associations between the distribution of plant relative abundances and seasonal precipitation variables in 34% of genera analysed. Significant differences were identified in size-class distribution between dry affiliates and generalists. Dry affiliates were not dominant in any size class in any plot type, whereas climate generalists dominated most of the size classes in the dry plots and the mid-range size classes in the wet plots. Dry-affiliate genera were a minority, even in dry forests. Wet-affiliate genera were correlated with shade tolerance, whereas genera with no rainfall affiliation were often pioneers. Main conclusions: The results suggest that moisture variable seasonality influences community composition in a manner than can be related to the life-history trade-off between shade tolerance and pioneer ranking. One possible reason for higher diversity in wetter forests is that high rainfall amplifies the niche space available to shade-tolerant plants. Determining which plant groups are constrained by which environmental variables can contribute to our understanding of how forest composition may be changing now, and how it may change under future climate: if shade-tolerant trees are also drought-intolerant, community structure in wet forests may be more vulnerable to future increases in moisture stress.
spellingShingle Climate systems and policy
Environment
Butt, N
Malhi, Y
Phillips, O
New, M
Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title_full Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title_fullStr Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title_full_unstemmed Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title_short Floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western Amazonia
title_sort floristic and functional affiliations of woody plants with climate in western amazonia
topic Climate systems and policy
Environment
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AT phillipso floristicandfunctionalaffiliationsofwoodyplantswithclimateinwesternamazonia
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