INVESTIGADORES
OYARZABAL Mariano
artículos
Título:
Climatic and land use factors as drivers of species diversity in temperate grasslands on soils with agricultural potential
Autor/es:
SUSANA PERELMAN; SILVIA BURKART; MARIANO OYARZABAL; CAMILO BAGNATO; WILLIAM BATISTA
Revista:
JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
Editorial:
WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2017
ISSN:
1100-9233
Resumen:
Questions: Do remaining mesophytic grasslands on soils with agricultural potential respond to a latitudinal gradient? Are climatic or land use factors the principal drivers of regional and local diversity of these grasslands? Location: The mesophytic grasslands of the Argentine Pampas, between 32°S and38°S, along 600 km within the Mesopotamic, Rolling and Flooding Pampas of the Rio de la Plata grasslands.Methods: The species presence and cover was recorded in each of 96 remnantgrasslands on soils suitable for cropping, grouped in five sampling locations. In each region, confidence intervals for gamma diversity and for the slope of species/area curves were estimated. Unconstrained ordination was applied to detect the principal gradients in floristic composition and correlation analysis to identify their main drivers. Mantel test was used to evaluate the correlation between floristic similarity and geographical distance, and with Euclidean distance in fragmentation and climatic variables. To rank the climatic and land use factors that account for local species richness and percent number of exotics, we applied correlation analysis and regression models.Results: Community composition (73% native species) was mainly related to climatic variables determined by latitude, with a slight influence of fragmentation variables. Regional species richness responded to latitude: gamma diversity decreased linearly with increasing distance from the Equator, and so did the rate of species accumulation with expanding area. Alpha diversity did not vary in a systematic way with latitude, being associated with landscape fragmentation and mean annual precipitation. Relative importance of C4 grasses and mean percent exotics showed opposite latitudinal tendencies, the former decreasing and the latter increasing towards the South.Conclusions: Latitude was a strong determinant of regional diversity and community composition, but a partial driver for local species richness mainly influenced by landscape fragmentation. While climatic and geographical drivers determined gradual latitudinal turnover in regional species pools, within regions land-use history, stochastic processes and biotic interactions were also important. All these patterns need to be considered together when delimiting grassland nature reserves for conservation of the most diverse ecosystems of this region, threatened by agricultural expansion and intensification.