Back to Search Start Over

Soil flooding filters evolutionary lineages of tree communities in Amazonian riparian forests.

Soil flooding filters evolutionary lineages of tree communities in Amazonian riparian forests.

Authors :
de Souza, Sthefanie do Nascimento Gomes
Batista, Darlisson Mesquita
Quaresma, Adriano Costa
Costa, Ana Luiza
Demarchi, Layon Oreste
Albuquerque, Bianca Weiss
Klein, Viviane Pagnussat
Feitoza, Gildo
Resende, Angélica Farias
Mori, Gisele Biem
Wittmann, Florian
Oliveira, Leidiane Leão
Mortati, Amanda Frederico
da Cunha, Alan Cavalcanti
Schongart, Jochen
Lopes, Aline
Piedade, Maria Teresa Fernandez
André, Thiago
Source :
Ecology & Evolution (20457758); Jul2024, Vol. 14 Issue 7, p1-12, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Inundations in Amazonian black‐water river floodplain result in the selection of different tree lineages, thus promoting coexistence between species. We investigated whether Amazonian tree communities are phylogenetically structured and distributed along a flooding gradient from irregularly flooded forests along streams embedded within upland (terra‐firme) forest to seasonally flooded floodplains of large rivers (igapós). Floristic inventories and hydrological monitoring were performed along the Falsino River, a black‐water river in the eastern Amazon within the Amapá National Forest. We constructed a presence‐and‐absence matrix and generated a phylogeny using the vascular plant database available in GenBank. We calculated the standardized values of the metrics of phylogenetic diversity (ses.PD), average phylogenetic distance (ses.MPD), and average nearest‐neighbor distance (ses.MNTD) to test whether the history of relationships between species in the community is influenced by inundation. We used the phylogenetic endemism (PE) metric to verify the existence of taxa with restricted distribution. Linear regressions were used to test whether phylogenetic metrics have a significant relationship with the variables: maximum flood height, maximum water table depth, and maximum flood amplitude. The results show that forests subject to prolonged seasonal flooding have reduced taxon richness, low phylogenetic diversity, and random distribution of lineages within communities. On the other hand, terra‐firme riparian forests showed higher rates of taxon richness, diversity, and phylogenetic dispersion, in addition to greater phylogenetic endemism. These results indicate that seasonal and predictable soil flooding filters tree lineages along the hydrographic gradient. Different adaptations to root waterlogging are likely requirements for colonization in these environments and may represent an important factor in the diversification of tree lineages in the Amazon biome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20457758
Volume :
14
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Ecology & Evolution (20457758)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178738134
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11635