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Articles

Vertical distance from drainage drives floristic composition changes in an Amazonian rainforest

, , , , , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 241-253 | Received 28 Jan 2012, Accepted 05 Mar 2013, Published online: 24 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

Background: Plant composition changes with topography and edaphic gradients that correlate with soil-water and nutrient availability. Data on soil water for the Amazon Basin are scarce, limiting the possibility of distinguishing between soil and soil-water influences on plant composition.

Aim: We tested a new proxy for water table depth, the terrain height above nearest drainage (HAND), as a predictor of composition in trees, lianas, palms, shrubs, and herbs and compared HAND to conventional measures of height above sea level (HASL) and horizontal distances from nearest drainage (HDND).

Methods: Plant-species composition in 72 plots distributed across 64 km2 of lowland evergreen terra firme forest was summarised using non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS). NMDS scores were regressed against estimates of HAND, HASL and HDND.

Results: Plant composition was highly correlated with the vertical distance from water table, capturing up to 82% of variation. All life forms showed highest turnover rates in the zone with seasonally water-saturated soils, which can extend 350 m from stream margins.

Conclusions: Floristic composition is closely related to water table depth, and HAND appears to be the most robust available topographical metric of soil-water gradients. Brazilian conservation laws protecting 30-m-wide riparian buffers are likely to be too narrow to encompass the full zone of highest floristic turnover and may be ineffective in safeguarding riparian plant diversity.

Acknowledgements

Data used in this paper were obtained from data repositories maintained by the Brazilian Programme for Biodiversity Research (PPBio) and the National Institute for Amazonian Biodiversity (INCT-CENBAM). The field infrastructure was installed by the Programa Norte de Pós-Graduação (PNOPG-CAPES) and maintained by the Brazilian PELD (LTER) Program financed by National Council for Scientific and Technological Development CNPq. J.S. and T.E. were supported during this study by a CNPq fellowship. Part of this manuscript was developed during the workshops of PPBio/PPGECO-INPA at Reserva Ducke and RAINFOR (Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation)-UFAC workshop in Rio Branco, Brazil, 2011. We thank Laszlo Nagy, Toby Marthews and one anonymous reviewer for the positive insights and suggestions on the manuscript structure.

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