Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.

Amazonian rainforests sustain some of the richest tree communities on Earth, but their ecological and evolutionary responses to human threats remain poorly known. We used one of the largest experimental datasets currently available on tree dynamics in fragmented tropical forests and a recent phyloge...

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Main Authors: Bráulio A Santos, Marcelo Tabarelli, Felipe P L Melo, José L C Camargo, Ana Andrade, Susan G Laurance, William F Laurance
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237388?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e2af0514351247788895bbf21925e0632020-11-25T00:40:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01911e11310910.1371/journal.pone.0113109Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.Bráulio A SantosMarcelo TabarelliFelipe P L MeloJosé L C CamargoAna AndradeSusan G LauranceWilliam F LauranceAmazonian rainforests sustain some of the richest tree communities on Earth, but their ecological and evolutionary responses to human threats remain poorly known. We used one of the largest experimental datasets currently available on tree dynamics in fragmented tropical forests and a recent phylogeny of angiosperms to test whether tree communities have lost phylogenetic diversity since their isolation about two decades previously. Our findings revealed an overall trend toward phylogenetic impoverishment across the experimentally fragmented landscape, irrespective of whether tree communities were in 1-ha, 10-ha, or 100-ha forest fragments, near forest edges, or in continuous forest. The magnitude of the phylogenetic diversity loss was low (<2% relative to before-fragmentation values) but widespread throughout the study landscape, occurring in 32 of 40 1-ha plots. Consistent with this loss in phylogenetic diversity, we observed a significant decrease of 50% in phylogenetic dispersion since forest isolation, irrespective of plot location. Analyses based on tree genera that have significantly increased (28 genera) or declined (31 genera) in abundance and basal area in the landscape revealed that increasing genera are more phylogenetically related than decreasing ones. Also, the loss of phylogenetic diversity was greater in tree communities where increasing genera proliferated and decreasing genera reduced their importance values, suggesting that this taxonomic replacement is partially underlying the phylogenetic impoverishment at the landscape scale. This finding has clear implications for the current debate about the role human-modified landscapes play in sustaining biodiversity persistence and key ecosystem services, such as carbon storage. Although the generalization of our findings to other fragmented tropical forests is uncertain, it could negatively affect ecosystem productivity and stability and have broader impacts on coevolved organisms.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237388?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bráulio A Santos
Marcelo Tabarelli
Felipe P L Melo
José L C Camargo
Ana Andrade
Susan G Laurance
William F Laurance
spellingShingle Bráulio A Santos
Marcelo Tabarelli
Felipe P L Melo
José L C Camargo
Ana Andrade
Susan G Laurance
William F Laurance
Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Bráulio A Santos
Marcelo Tabarelli
Felipe P L Melo
José L C Camargo
Ana Andrade
Susan G Laurance
William F Laurance
author_sort Bráulio A Santos
title Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
title_short Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
title_full Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
title_fullStr Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
title_full_unstemmed Phylogenetic impoverishment of Amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
title_sort phylogenetic impoverishment of amazonian tree communities in an experimentally fragmented forest landscape.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Amazonian rainforests sustain some of the richest tree communities on Earth, but their ecological and evolutionary responses to human threats remain poorly known. We used one of the largest experimental datasets currently available on tree dynamics in fragmented tropical forests and a recent phylogeny of angiosperms to test whether tree communities have lost phylogenetic diversity since their isolation about two decades previously. Our findings revealed an overall trend toward phylogenetic impoverishment across the experimentally fragmented landscape, irrespective of whether tree communities were in 1-ha, 10-ha, or 100-ha forest fragments, near forest edges, or in continuous forest. The magnitude of the phylogenetic diversity loss was low (<2% relative to before-fragmentation values) but widespread throughout the study landscape, occurring in 32 of 40 1-ha plots. Consistent with this loss in phylogenetic diversity, we observed a significant decrease of 50% in phylogenetic dispersion since forest isolation, irrespective of plot location. Analyses based on tree genera that have significantly increased (28 genera) or declined (31 genera) in abundance and basal area in the landscape revealed that increasing genera are more phylogenetically related than decreasing ones. Also, the loss of phylogenetic diversity was greater in tree communities where increasing genera proliferated and decreasing genera reduced their importance values, suggesting that this taxonomic replacement is partially underlying the phylogenetic impoverishment at the landscape scale. This finding has clear implications for the current debate about the role human-modified landscapes play in sustaining biodiversity persistence and key ecosystem services, such as carbon storage. Although the generalization of our findings to other fragmented tropical forests is uncertain, it could negatively affect ecosystem productivity and stability and have broader impacts on coevolved organisms.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4237388?pdf=render
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