Published September 13, 2021 | Version v1
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The contribution of environmental and dispersal filters on beta diversity patterns in Amazonian tree communities

  • 1. Field Museum of Natural History
  • 2. Naturalis Biodiversity Center
  • 3. Consortium for Sustainable Development of the Andean Ecoregion
  • 4. Universidad Central
  • 5. University of California, Berkeley

Description

Environmental filters (e.g. climate, geomorphology and soils) and dispersal filters are key determinants of species distributions of Amazonian tree communities. However, a comprehensive analysis of the role of environmental and dispersal filters is needed to understand the ecological and evolutionary processes that drive phylogenetic and taxonomic turnover of Amazonian tree communities. We compare measures of taxonomic and phylogenetic beta diversity in 40 one-hectare plots to test the relative importance of climate, soils, geology, geomorphology, pure spatial variables and the spatial variation of environmental drivers of phylogenetic and taxonomic turnover in Ecuadorian Amazon tree communities. We found low phylogenetic and high taxonomic turnover with respect to environmental and dispersal filters. In addition, our results suggest that climate is a significantly better predictor of phylogenetic turnover and species turnover than geomorphology and soils at all spatial scales. The influence of climate as a predictor of phylogenetic turnover was stronger at broader spatial scales (50 km2) whereas geomorphology and soils appear to be better predictors of taxonomic turnover at mid (5 km2) and fine spatial scales (0.5 km2) but a weak predictor of phylogenetic turnover at broad spatial scales. We also found that the combined effect of geomorphology and soils was significantly higher for species turnover at all spatial scales but not for phylogenetic turnover at large spatial scales. Geographic distances as proxy of dispersal limitation was a better predictor of phylogenetic turnover at distances of 50<500 km. Our findings suggest that climatic variation at local and regional scales can better predict phylogenetic and taxonomic turnover than geomorphology and soils.

Notes

Funding provided by: American Philosophical Society
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100001461
Award Number: Lewis and Clark Grant for Exploration

Funding provided by: Garden Club of America
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100005839
Award Number: Tropical Botany Grant

Funding provided by: Department of Integrative Biology, University of California Berkeley
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010948
Award Number: Summer Research Grant

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Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ecy.2894 (DOI)