Data from: Effects of landscape configuration and composition on phylogenetic diversity of trees in a highly fragmented tropical forest
Fragmentation of tropical forests is a major driver of the global extinction crisis. A key question is understanding how fragmentation impacts phylogenetic diversity, which summarizes the total evolutionary history shared across species within a community. Conserving phylogenetic diversity decreases...
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Zusammenfassung: | Fragmentation of tropical forests is a major driver of the global
extinction crisis. A key question is understanding how fragmentation
impacts phylogenetic diversity, which summarizes the total evolutionary
history shared across species within a community. Conserving phylogenetic
diversity decreases the potential of losing unique ecological and
phenotypic traits and plays important roles in maintaining ecosystem
function and stability. Our study was conducted in landscapes within the
highly fragmented Brazilian Atlantic forest. We sampled living trees with
d.b.h. ≥ 4.8 cm in 0.1 ha plots within 28 fragment interiors and 12
fragment edges to evaluate the impacts of landscape configuration,
composition and patch size, as well as edge effects, on phylogenetic
diversity indices (PD, a measure of phylogenetic richness; MPD,
phylogenetic distance between individuals in a community in deep
evolutionary time; and MNTD, phylogenetic distance between each individual
and its nearest phylogenetic neighbour). We found that PD and MPD were
correlated with species richness, while MNTD was not. Best models suggest
that MPD was positively related to edge density and negatively related to
the number of forest patches, but that there was no effect of landscape
configuration and composition metrics on PD or MNTD, or on standardized
values of phylogenetic structure (sesPD, sesMPD and sesMNTD), which
control for species richness. Considering all selected models for
phylogenetic diversity and structure, edge density and number of forest
patches were most frequently selected. With increasing patch size, we
found lower PD in interiors but no change at edges and lower sesMNTD
regardless of habitat type. Additionally, PD and sesMNTD were higher in
interiors than at edges. Synthesis. Changes in MPD and sesMNTD suggest
that extirpation of species at edges or in highly fragmented landscapes
increases the dominance of species within a subset of clades (phylogenetic
clustering), likely those adapted to disturbance. Smaller patch sizes are
phylogenetically diverse and overdispersed, probably due to an invasion of
edge-adapted species. Conservation must enhance patch area and
connectivity via forest restoration; pivotally, even small forest patches
are important reservoirs of phylogenetic diversity in the highly
threatened Brazilian Atlantic forest. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.fq988 |