Authors
Víctor Arroyo‐Rodríguez, Jeannine Cavender‐Bares, Federico Escobar, Felipe PL Melo, Marcelo Tabarelli, Braulio A Santos
Publication date
2012/5
Journal
Journal of Ecology
Volume
100
Issue
3
Pages
702-711
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
1. Deforestation and forest fragmentation can drive species to local extinction, potentially changing the phylogenetic community structure and diversity of remaining assemblages. We tested this hypothesis analysing a large vegetation data set from a highly fragmented rain forest.
2. We assessed 9000 trees (both saplings and adults) from 268 species in 45 rain forest patches (ranging from < 1 to 700 ha) in three landscapes with different deforestation levels (4%, 11%, and 24% forest cover) in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. We tested whether species density (i.e. number of species per unit area) and phylogenetic structure and diversity differed among landscapes, whether they were related to patch area, and whether the relationships differed among landscapes.
3. Overall, the observed differences in sapling and adult species densities across forest patches and landscapes (e.g. lower species densities in smaller patches …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
V Arroyo‐Rodríguez, J Cavender‐Bares, F Escobar… - Journal of Ecology, 2012