Understanding different dominance patterns in western Amazonian forests




Matas-Granados Laura, Draper Frederick C., Cayuela Luis, de Aledo Julia G., Arellano Gabriel, Ben Saadi Celina, Baker Timothy R., Phillips Oliver L., Coronado Euridice N. Honorio, Ruokolainen Kalle, Garcia-Villacorta Roosevelt, Roucoux Katherine H., Gueze Maximilien, Sandoval Elvis Valderrama, Fine Paul V. A., Guerra Carlos A. Amasifuen, Gomez Ricardo Zarate, Diaz Pablo R. Stevenson, Monteagudo-Mendoza Abel, Martinez Rodolfo Vasquez, Socolar Jacob B., Disney Mathias, Pasquel Jhon del Aguila, Llampazo Gerardo Flores, Arenas Jim Vega, Huaymacari Jose Reyna, Rios Julio M. Grandez, Macia Manuel J.

PublisherWiley-Blackwell

2024

Ecology Letters

ECOLOGY LETTERS

e14351

27

1

1461-023X

1461-0248

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/ele.14351

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ele.14351

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/380947159



Dominance of neotropical tree communities by a few species is widely documented, but dominant trees show a variety of distributional patterns still poorly understood. Here, we used 503 forest inventory plots (93,719 individuals ≥2.5 cm diameter, 2609 species) to explore the relationships between local abundance, regional frequency and spatial aggregation of dominant species in four main habitat types in western Amazonia. Although the abundance-occupancy relationship is positive for the full dataset, we found that among dominant Amazonian tree species, there is a strong negative relationship between local abundance and regional frequency and/or spatial aggregation across habitat types. Our findings suggest an ecological trade-off whereby dominant species can be locally abundant (local dominants) or regionally widespread (widespread dominants), but rarely both (oligarchs). Given the importance of dominant species as drivers of diversity and ecosystem functioning, unravelling different dominance patterns is a research priority to direct conservation efforts in Amazonian forests.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:27