Hierarchical effects of historical and environmental factors on lizard assemblages in the upper Madeira River, Brazilian Amazonia

Investigating the role of historical and ecological factors structuring assemblages is relevant to understand mechanisms and processes affecting biodiversity across heterogeneous habitats. Considering that community assembly often involves scale-dependent processes, different spatial scales may reve...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-06, Vol.15 (6), p.e0233881-e0233881
Hauptverfasser: Marques Peixoto, Gabriela, De Fraga, Rafael, C Araújo, Maria, Kaefer, Igor Luis, Lima, Albertina Pimentel
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creator Marques Peixoto, Gabriela
De Fraga, Rafael
C Araújo, Maria
Kaefer, Igor Luis
Lima, Albertina Pimentel
description Investigating the role of historical and ecological factors structuring assemblages is relevant to understand mechanisms and processes affecting biodiversity across heterogeneous habitats. Considering that community assembly often involves scale-dependent processes, different spatial scales may reveal distinct factors structuring assemblages. In this study we use arboreal and leaf-litter lizard abundance data from 83 plots to investigate assemblage spatial structure at two distinct scales in southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. At a regional scale, we test the general hypothesis that the Madeira River acts as a barrier to dispersal of some lizard species, which results in distinct assemblages between river banks. At a local scale, we test the hypothesis that assemblages are not evenly distributed across heterogeneous habitats but respond to a continuum of inadequate-to-optimal portions of environmental predictors. Our results show that regional lizard assemblages are structured by the upper Madeira River acting as a regional barrier to 29.62% of the species sampled. This finding suggests species have been historically isolated at one of the river banks, or that distinct geomorphological features influence species occurrence at each river bank. At a local scale, different sets of environmental predictors affected assemblage composition between river banks or even along a river bank. These findings indicate that environmental filtering is a major cause of lizard assemblage spatial structure in the upper Madeira River, but predictor variables cannot be generalized over the extensive (nearly 500 km) study area. Based on a single study system we demonstrate that lizard assemblages along the forests near the banks of the upper Madeira River are not randomly structured but respond to multiple factors acting at different and hierarchical spatial scales.
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subjects Animal behavior
Animals
Biodiversity
Biological research
Biology and Life Sciences
Brazil
Community involvement
Dispersal
Distribution
Earth Sciences
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Ecosystem
Environment
Environmental effects
Environmental factors
Environmental history
Forests
Geomorphology
Habitats
Hypotheses
Leaf litter
Lizards
Lizards - physiology
Natural history
People and places
Population Dynamics
Precipitation
Reptiles
River banks
Rivers
Species
Studies
title Hierarchical effects of historical and environmental factors on lizard assemblages in the upper Madeira River, Brazilian Amazonia
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