Abstract
Research Highlights: Functional diversity studies help to better understand how organisms respond to different environmental conditions. Conditions in tropical flooded forests are highly variable, including levels of nutrient availability, pH, and flood depth, but few studies have explored the impact of variation in these factors on plant functional diversity. Background and Objectives: In the Orinoco basin, as in the Amazon, floodplain forests have been classified into várzea (white-water rivers, with nutrient-rich soils) and igapó (black-water rivers, associated with nutrient-poor soils). We evaluated the functional diversity of plant species in várzea and igapó, as well as the influence of external and internal filters on the plant community assembly of each forest type, and compared our results with studies in the Amazon basin. Materials and Methods: Six functional traits were recorded in the várzea and igapó forests of the Colombian Orinoco basin (one-hectare plot for each forest type, with no replicates). We evaluated plant species diversity (richness, Fisher’s α, Shannon and Simpson indices), as well as functional diversity (functional richness, functional evenness, functional divergence, and functional dispersion) and the influence of external and internal filters, based on a comparison of variance at different organizational levels. Results: A high functional differentiation between várzea and igapó was found, as well as a high functional divergence within each forest type. We also observed a greater influence of internal filters on the community assembly of both forest types, compared to external filters. Functional traits such as wood density and leaf dry matter content, showed the same patterns as the várzea and igapó forests in the Amazon. Conclusions: Despite the low taxonomic and functional richness, there is high functional divergence within flooded forests. We also show that in forests under stress (e.g., from flooding), internal filters can be key in assembling communities and promote high functional divergence. Given that the functional diversity of the várzea and igapó in the Orinoco is largely unexplored, we highlight the need for more research for the effective conservation of these flooded forests.
Highlights
Floodplain forests grow in areas periodically flooded by river overflow, by direct precipitation, or after extreme climatic events
Even though there is not functional divergence in all traits, we found that the várzea is mainly characterized by traits related to high growth rates, while the igapó has traits associated with low characterized by traits related to high growth rates, while the igapó has traits associated with low growth rates, as hypothesized
In our third hypothesis we proposed that the Amazon and Orinoco floodplain forests would show similar functional trait tendencies
Summary
Floodplain forests grow in areas periodically flooded by river overflow, by direct precipitation, or after extreme climatic events. Floodplain vegetation is subjected to variation in flood duration, sedimentation and erosion, soil type, and water chemistry, and plants are adapted to a wide range of potentially stressful conditions [4]. Factors such as flood duration or small differences in soil nutrient content can generate thresholds for the establishment of different species [5]. Igapó are flooded by black-water rivers originating in lands from the Precambrian and Tertiary periods, and are poor in suspended nutrients [12] Annual deposition of these differing sediments means that várzea has nutrient-rich soils, while igapó are nutrient-poor [1,7,13]
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