Data from: Biotic pressures and environmental heterogeneity shape beta-diversity of seedling communities in tropical montane forests
Many theories have been proposed to explain the high diversity of plants in the tropics. However, we lack an understanding of the processes that drive plant diversity and community assembly at different spatial scales. Here, we applied beta-diversity partitioning to test how biotic and abiotic facto...
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Zusammenfassung: | Many theories have been proposed to explain the high diversity of plants
in the tropics. However, we lack an understanding of the processes that
drive plant diversity and community assembly at different spatial scales.
Here, we applied beta-diversity partitioning to test how biotic and
abiotic factors are associated with seedling beta-diversity in a tropical
montane forest in Southern Ecuador. We recorded seedling communities on 81
subplots at nine plots located at three elevations along a 2000-m
elevational gradient. We measured biotic pressures (i.e. herbivory and
fungal pathogen attacks) and environmental conditions (i.e. soil moisture
and canopy closure) at all subplots and related them to species turnover
and richness differences in seedling communities within and between
elevations. We found that species turnover increased with differences in
biotic dissimilarity within elevations, while differences in species
richness within elevations increased with increasing environmental
dissimilarity. Between elevations, species turnover increased with
increasing environmental dissimilarity. Our findings show that species
turnover and changes in species richness are related differently to
abiotic and biotic factors, and that the importance of these factors for
shaping seedling diversity is scale-dependent. Our study contributes to
better understand the processes driving seedling beta-diversity and the
assembly of plant communities in highly diverse tropical montane forests. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.3r2280gmh |