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Altitudinal gradient drives regional and local diversity and composition patterns of epiphyllous bryophytes in ecological refuges

Authors :
J. P. S. Souza
W. V. S. M. Batista
F. M. S. Araújo
L. E. N. Costa
M. P. P. Silva
Source :
Plant Biology. 24:292-301
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

'Brejos de altitude' is an ecosystem that has been subjected to severe exploitation, leading to an intense reduction in Brazil. Understanding the patterns of bryophyte diversity and composition, particularly of specialized species such as the epiphylls, to anthropic and abiotic variables is crucial for implementing protection measures. We investigated the relationship between composition and diversity of epiphyllous bryophytes and anthropic (edge effects) and abiotic (altitude) variables at local (within each 'Brejo') and regional (set of three 'Brejos') scale. Abiotic and anthropic variables were correlated with alpha and beta diversity (decomposed into species replacement and richness differences) using GLM. Their effects on species composition were evaluated using PERMANOVA. The localities at higher elevations harboured a richer bryoflora and overall beta diversity patterns were associated with altitude and locality, which acted over different scales. Regionally, the contribution of richness differences was limited with increasing altitude. Yet, dissimilarities among localities were associated with richness differences and replacement, denoting the importance of local factors. The composition was explained by local factors interacting with the regional altitudinal gradient. Anthropic activity was significant only when interacting with local factors and altitudinal gradient. Environmental filtering associated with altitude played a more important role in shaping the diversity and composition of epiphyllous bryophytes, at both regional and local scales. Each 'Brejo' acts as an ecological refuge, harbouring part of the whole environmental gradient, and presents a unique floristic composition. Moreover, partitioning beta diversity highlighted the interplay of local and regional forces shaping diversity patterns.

Details

ISSN :
14388677 and 14358603
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e5c07ca83b906ff3fb0142d833451b3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/plb.13365