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Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale

Our perception of diversity, including both alpha- and beta-diversity components, depends on spatial scale. Studies of spatial variation of the latter are just starting, with a paucity of research on beta-diversity patterns at smaller scales. Understanding these patterns and the processes shaping th...

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Autores principales: Nguyen, Dinh T., Gómez-Zurita, Jesús
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4898766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27276228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156840
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author Nguyen, Dinh T.
Gómez-Zurita, Jesús
author_facet Nguyen, Dinh T.
Gómez-Zurita, Jesús
author_sort Nguyen, Dinh T.
collection PubMed
description Our perception of diversity, including both alpha- and beta-diversity components, depends on spatial scale. Studies of spatial variation of the latter are just starting, with a paucity of research on beta-diversity patterns at smaller scales. Understanding these patterns and the processes shaping the distribution of diversity is critical to describe this diversity, but it is paramount in conservation too. Here, we investigate the diversity and structure of a tropical community of herbivorous beetles at a reduced local scale of some 10 km(2), evaluating the effect of a small, gradual ecological change on this structure. We sampled leaf beetles in the Núi Chúa National Park (S Vietnam), studying changes in alpha- and beta-diversity across an elevation gradient up to 500 m, encompassing the ecotone between critically endangered lowland dry deciduous forest and mixed evergreen forest at higher elevations. Leaf beetle diversity was assessed using several molecular tree-based species delimitation approaches (with mtDNA cox1 data), species richness using rarefaction and incidence-based diversity indexes, and beta-diversity was investigated decomposing the contribution of species turnover and nestedness. We documented 155 species in the area explored and species-richness estimates 1.5–2.0x higher. Species diversity was similar in both forest types and changes in alpha-diversity along the elevation gradient showed an expected local increase of diversity in the ecotone. Beta-diversity was high among forest paths (average Sørensen's dissimilarity = 0.694) and, tentatively fixing at 300 m the boundary between otherwise continuous biomes, demonstrated similarly high beta-diversity (Sørensen's dissimilarity = 0.581), with samples clustering according to biome/elevation. Highly relevant considering the local scale of the study, beta-diversity had a high contribution of species replacement among locales (54.8%) and between biomes (79.6%), suggesting environmental heterogeneity as the dominant force shaping diversity at such small scale, directly and indirectly on the plant communities. Protection actions in the Park, especially these addressed at the imperative conservation of dry forest, must ponder the small scale at which processes shape species diversity and community structure for inconspicuous, yet extraordinarily diverse organisms such as the leaf beetles.
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spelling pubmed-48987662016-06-16 Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale Nguyen, Dinh T. Gómez-Zurita, Jesús PLoS One Research Article Our perception of diversity, including both alpha- and beta-diversity components, depends on spatial scale. Studies of spatial variation of the latter are just starting, with a paucity of research on beta-diversity patterns at smaller scales. Understanding these patterns and the processes shaping the distribution of diversity is critical to describe this diversity, but it is paramount in conservation too. Here, we investigate the diversity and structure of a tropical community of herbivorous beetles at a reduced local scale of some 10 km(2), evaluating the effect of a small, gradual ecological change on this structure. We sampled leaf beetles in the Núi Chúa National Park (S Vietnam), studying changes in alpha- and beta-diversity across an elevation gradient up to 500 m, encompassing the ecotone between critically endangered lowland dry deciduous forest and mixed evergreen forest at higher elevations. Leaf beetle diversity was assessed using several molecular tree-based species delimitation approaches (with mtDNA cox1 data), species richness using rarefaction and incidence-based diversity indexes, and beta-diversity was investigated decomposing the contribution of species turnover and nestedness. We documented 155 species in the area explored and species-richness estimates 1.5–2.0x higher. Species diversity was similar in both forest types and changes in alpha-diversity along the elevation gradient showed an expected local increase of diversity in the ecotone. Beta-diversity was high among forest paths (average Sørensen's dissimilarity = 0.694) and, tentatively fixing at 300 m the boundary between otherwise continuous biomes, demonstrated similarly high beta-diversity (Sørensen's dissimilarity = 0.581), with samples clustering according to biome/elevation. Highly relevant considering the local scale of the study, beta-diversity had a high contribution of species replacement among locales (54.8%) and between biomes (79.6%), suggesting environmental heterogeneity as the dominant force shaping diversity at such small scale, directly and indirectly on the plant communities. Protection actions in the Park, especially these addressed at the imperative conservation of dry forest, must ponder the small scale at which processes shape species diversity and community structure for inconspicuous, yet extraordinarily diverse organisms such as the leaf beetles. Public Library of Science 2016-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4898766/ /pubmed/27276228 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156840 Text en © 2016 Nguyen, Gómez-Zurita http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nguyen, Dinh T.
Gómez-Zurita, Jesús
Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title_full Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title_fullStr Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title_full_unstemmed Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title_short Subtle Ecological Gradient in the Tropics Triggers High Species-Turnover in a Local Geographical Scale
title_sort subtle ecological gradient in the tropics triggers high species-turnover in a local geographical scale
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4898766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27276228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156840
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