Abstract

Understanding the factors that affect biodiversity is of central interest to ecology, and essential to species conservation and ecosystems management. We sampled bird communities in 17 forest fragments in the Cerrado biome, the Central-West region of Brazil. We aimed to know the communities structure pattern and the influence of geographical distance and environmental variables on them, along a gradient of fragmented habitats at both local and landscape scales. Eight structural variables of the fragments served as an environmental distance measurement at the local scale while five metrics served as an environmental distance measurement at the landscape scale. Species presence-absence data were used to calculate the dissimilarity index. Beta diversity was calculated using three indices (βsim, βnes and βsor), representing the spatial species turnover, nestedness and total beta diversity, respectively. Spatial species turnover was the predominant pattern in the structure of the communities. Variations in beta diversity were explained only by the environmental variables of the landscape with spatial configuration being more important than the composition. This fact indicates that, in Cerrado of Goiás avian communities structure, deterministic ecological processes associated to differences in species responses to landscape fragmentation are more important than stochastic processes driven by species dispersal.

Highlights

  • Understanding the processes responsible for the emergence and maintenance of beta diversity is essential to biodiversity conservation and management of ecosystems

  • We aim to elucidate the following issues: (1) if bird communities in these fragments are structured by nestedness or spatial species turnover patterns; and (2) if the variation in species composition between the fragments are influenced by the geographical distance, the structural variables of the fragments or the environmental variables of the surrounding landscapes

  • There was a relationship between the species turnover and environmental distance of the surrounding landscape

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the processes responsible for the emergence and maintenance of beta diversity is essential to biodiversity conservation and management of ecosystems. As turnover and nestedness are patterns generated by different processes, the partitioning of beta diversity into these two components ensures a clearer understanding of the mechanisms responsible for variations in communities composition (Svenning et al 2011). The differentiation of such components is fundamental to the understanding of biogeographical, ecological and conservation issues (Baselga 2010)

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