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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Dinâmica temporal e padrões de diversidade taxonômica e funcional em comunidades campestres submetidas a diferentes manejos de pastejo

Boavista, Lidiane da Rosa January 2016 (has links)
O pastejo é considerado um fator determinante para a manutenção e conservação da vegetação campestre (campos) no sul do Brasil, sendo considerado o responsável por construir a heterogeneidade estrutural, a composição de espécies e a diversidade dos campos. Porém o manejo do pastejo é fundamental para sucesso da atividade pecuária, uma vez que longos períodos de pastejo excessivo e intenso ao invés de manter áreas campestres pode degradá-las, diminuindo a diversidade e produtividade, tornando os campos suscetíveis a invasão por espécies exóticas. Para o sucesso da relação construída entre o manejador, os animais e a vegetação, as estratégias de manejo que possibilitem uma pecuária rentável, mas que busque conservar a vegetação campestre, são fundamentais. O objetivo desta tese foi verificar os efeitos do pastejo sobre a vegetação campestre, tendo como ferramenta principal para isso, diferentes manejos. Os efeitos do pastejo foram avaliados através de índices de diversidade taxonômica e funcional, e da variação de atributos funcionais de gramíneas, analisando especificamente: (1) como estratégias de manejo contínuo e rotativo influenciam a dinâmica da vegetação campestre (biomassa, diversidade, riqueza e equitabilidade); (2) a influência do manejo do pastejo na composição e diversidade funcional de comunidades campestres descritas por gramíneas, e os efeitos sobre a variação intra- e interespecífica de atributos foliares (SLA e LDMC) das espécies de gramíneas; (3) o efeito de diferentes intensidades de pastejo (ofertas de forragem) nas diversidades alfa e beta das comunidades de plantas. Foram verificadas mudanças na diversidade, equitabilidade, riqueza de espécies, biomassa condicionadas pelo pastejo rotativo, que se mostrou benéfico para vegetação campestre. O pastejo rotativo proporcionou também um incremento na diversidade funcional, condicionado pela variação intra- e interespecífica nos atributos das gramíneas. Diferentes intensidades de pastejo promoveram diferenças de alfa e beta diversidade sob diferentes intensidades de pastejo. O pastejo demonstrou exercer papel determinante em toda a dinâmica campestre, tendo efeitos consideráveis em todos os níveis de avaliação, desde a riqueza de espécies até na diversidade funcional, ficando evidente que a decisão do manejo é fundamental tanto para a produtividade quanto para a manutenção da vegetação campestre. / Grazing is considered a determining factor for the maintenance and conservation of grasslands in southern Brazil and is considered one of the main driver of the structural heterogeneity, species composition and diversity of the grasslands. But the management of grazing is key to the success of livestock farming, since long periods of excessive and intense grazing instead of maintaining grassland, can degrade them, reducing the diversity and productivity, leading the grassland susceptible to invasion of exotic species. For the success of the relationship built between managers, animals and vegetation, a strategic management that allows an efficient farming together with the conservation of grassland vegetation is essential. The objective of this thesis was to investigate the effects of grazing on the grassland, based on different managements of grazing. The effects of grazing were evaluated by taxonomic and functional diversity indices, and the variation of functional traits of grasses, analyzing specifically: (1) how continuous and rotational grazing management influence the dynamics of grassland vegetation (biomass, diversity, richness and evenness); (2) the influence of grazing management on the functional composition and functional diversity in grassland communities described by grasses, and its effects on the intra- and interspecific variation of leaf traits (SLA and LDMC) of grass species; (3) the effect of different grazing intensities (forage dry matter offer) in the alpha and beta diversity of plant communities. Changes in diversity, evenness, species richness, and biomass were verified, which were conditioned by the rotational grazing that proved beneficial to grassland. The rotational grazing provided also an increase in functional diversity, due to intra and interspecific variation of the grasses traits. Different grazing intensities promoted differences in alpha and beta diversity under different grazing intensities. Grazing demonstrated to have a decisive role in the whole dynamics of grassland communities, with considerable effects on all levels here assessed, from the species richness to the functional diversity, becoming apparent that the management decision is very important for both the productivity and the maintenance of grassland structure and diversity.
22

Importância de processos determinísticos e estocásticos sobre padrões de diversidade taxonômica, funcional e filogenética de mariposas Arctiinae / Importance of deterministic and stochastic processes on the taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity of Arctiinae moths

Santos, Carolina Moreno dos 27 March 2017 (has links)
Submitted by JÚLIO HEBER SILVA (julioheber@yahoo.com.br) on 2017-07-19T17:46:16Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Carolina Moreno dos Santos - 2017.pdf: 3257702 bytes, checksum: 16f671b0b91f5119f3898a4b0cba8314 (MD5) license_rdf: 0 bytes, checksum: d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Luciana Ferreira (lucgeral@gmail.com) on 2017-07-20T10:59:12Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Carolina Moreno dos Santos - 2017.pdf: 3257702 bytes, checksum: 16f671b0b91f5119f3898a4b0cba8314 (MD5) license_rdf: 0 bytes, checksum: d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-07-20T10:59:13Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Tese - Carolina Moreno dos Santos - 2017.pdf: 3257702 bytes, checksum: 16f671b0b91f5119f3898a4b0cba8314 (MD5) license_rdf: 0 bytes, checksum: d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017-03-27 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPES / Arctiinae is one of the most diverse and cosmopolitan subfamilies of Lepidoptera, and is composed of four tribes: Lithosiini, Amerilini, Syntomini and Arctiini. In the Neotropics occur Arctiini and Lithosiini only. Moths of these two tribes are very different in body size, coloration patterns, diet, in the type of secondary compounds they sequester, and in habitat use. The morphological, physiological, and behavioral characteristics of these moths are very important in influencing their distribution in the environment. The distribution of species can also be highly influenced by deterministics (based in the niche models, like as ecological interactions and environmental filtering) and stochastic processes (i.e.: ecological drift, dispersion limitations, random speciation and extinction). To answer which processes best determine the distribution of Arctiinae moths, this Thesis was composed by three chapters. In the first chapter I tested which model of metacommunity (related to environmental and spatial variables) best determine the distribution of groups of species: common, rare, habitat specialist, habitat generalist and species belonging to tribes Arctiini and Lithosiini. In the second chapter, I tested if the functional structure of Arctiini and of Lithosiini and if the phylogenetic structure of Arctiini are influenced in the same way by stochastic and deterministic processes. Arctiinae moths (both tribes) were influenced by environmental (also related to deterministic processes) and spatial (also related to stochastic processes) variables, but the environment was more important to the majority of the groups of taxonomic diversity (chapter 1) and to the functional and phylogenetic diversities (chapter 2). As the deterministic processes are very important to determine the distribution of Arctiinae on communities, in the third chapter I tested which deterministic process (specifically, antagonic interactions or environmental filtering) is more important in determine the functional structure of these moths along different physiognomies and in two marked weather seasons, characteristics of the study area. The results showed that Arctiinae moths are strongly influenced by environmental filters, and that antagonistic interactions (i.e. competition) are not so important in determine the functional structure of Arctiinae moths on communities. / Arctiinae, uma das subfamílias mais diversas e cosmopolitas de Lepidoptera, é dividida em quatro tribos: Lithosiini, Amerilini, Syntomini e Arctiini. Somente Arctiini e Lithosiini ocorrem nos Neotrópicos. Apesar de serem da mesma subfamília, mariposas destas duas tribos Neotropicais se diferenciam muito em tamanho, padrões de coloração, dieta, tipo de substância secundária que sequestram e uso de habitat. Todas as diferenças morfológicas, fisiológicas e comportamentais destas mariposas influenciam muito em suas distribuições ao longo de gradientes ambientais. A distribuição das espécies também pode ser fortemente influenciada por processos determinísticos (baseados em modelos de nicho, como por exemplo, interações ecológicas e filtragem ambiental) e por processos estocásticos (exemplos: deriva ecológica, limitação na dispersão, especiação e extinção aleatórias). Para responder quais processos melhor determinam a distribuição de mariposas Arctiinae, esta Tese foi composta por três capítulos. No primeiro capítulo testei qual modelo de metacomunidades (relacionados com variáveis ambientais e espaciais), melhor determinam a distribuição de espécies comuns, raras, especialistas de habitat, generalistas de habitat e de espécies pertencentes às tribos Arctiini e Lithosiini. No segundo capítulo testei se a estrutura funcional de Arctiini e de Lithosiini e se a estrutura filogenética de Arctiini são influenciadas da mesma forma por processos estocásticos e determinísticos. Mariposas Arctiinae foram influenciadas tanto por variáveis ambientais (relacionadas a processos determinísticos) quanto por espaciais (relacionadas a processos estocásticos), mas o ambiente foi mais importante tanto para a maioria dos grupos da diversidade taxonômica (capítulo 1) quanto para as diversidades funcional e filogenética (capítulo 2). Como os processos determinísticos são muito importantes em determinar a distribuição de Arctiinae ao longo das comunidades, no terceiro capítulo testei qual destes processos determinísticos (especificamente se interações antagônicas ou se filtragem ambiental) é mais importante em determinar a estrutura funcional de mariposas Arctiinae ao longo de diferentes fitofisionomias e de diferentes estações climáticas, marcantes da área de estudo. Os resultados mostraram que mariposas Arctiinae são fortemente influenciadas por filtros ambientais, e que interações antagônicas (ex.: exclusão competitiva) não são tão importantes em determinar a estrutura funcional de mariposas Arctiinae nas comunidades.
23

Patterns in Functional Structure and Diversity of Stream Fish Assemblages Related to Environmental Factors at Multiple Scales

Pease, Allison Ann 2010 December 1900 (has links)
The distribution and abundance of stream fishes are influenced by many factors operating at multiple scales. Understanding how environmental variables influence the structure of stream fish assemblages is important for habitat assessment, stream restoration, and for predicting responses to environmental change. An emerging view in community ecology is that a focus on the functional structure of species assemblages in relation to environmental gradients may reveal more general patterns applicable across geographic regions. In this study, I used functional traits related to the trophic ecology, habitat use, and life-history strategies of fishes to examine the influences of environmental factors on stream fish assemblages. The research was carried out in two large regions: the Río Grijalva basin in southern Mexico and the Brazos and Trinity basins in Central Texas. In both regions, relationships between functional structure of stream fish assemblages and environmental factors at local, landscape, and regional scales were examined. Environmental characteristics at all three scales influenced the functional attributes of assemblages studied here. At the local reach scale, stream size, substrate characteristics, the availability of riffle and pool habitats, and abundance of in-stream cover structures were related to the functional trait composition of fish assemblages in the Río Grijalva Basin and in Central Texas streams. Landscape features most strongly related to functional structure in both regions were the extent of forested area in the watershed and the amount of land developed for urban and agricultural uses. At the regional scale, broad physiographic differences between ecoregions had a large influence on the taxonomic and functional composition of stream fish assemblages in Central Texas. Along the broad-scale longitudinal fluvial gradient of the Grijalva region, pronounced changes in the species composition, functional trait diversity, and trophic structure of fish assemblages were observed.
24

The Impact of Edge Effects & Matrix Restoration on Dung Beetle Community Structure & Ecosystem Function

Barnes, Andrew David January 2011 (has links)
Land-use change has become a force of global importance and has gained status as the most important driver of ecosystem degradation. The resulting creation of habitat edges has pervasive impacts on the distribution and persistence of species in forest ecosystems. Responses of species to edge effects can be highly dependent on ‘response’ traits, which may in turn co-vary with ‘effect’ traits that determine rates of ecosystem functioning. Therefore, non-random loss of species due to traits conferring higher susceptibility to extinction may also result in the loss of functionally-important species across a habitat edge gradient. Likewise, response and effect traits may be important in determining reassembly of communities in regenerating habitats, which may provide insight into potential scenarios of functional responses to restoration efforts. To test for potential off-site effects of adjacent matrix habitat restoration on dung beetle communities, I compared dung beetle community structure and species trait composition across Afromontane forest edges adjacent to degraded and regenerating matrix habitat at Ngel Nyaki forest reserve in Nigeria. I also measured dung removal rates across habitat edge gradients to investigate the relative off-site impacts of matrix restoration on dung beetle-mediated ecosystem processes. I found significant effects of adjacent matrix condition on edge response functions in dung beetle abundance, species distributions, and trait composition. Beetle abundances were markedly higher in forests adjacent to regenerating matrix, whereas the largest differences in trait composition were found between degraded and regenerating matrix habitat, indicating the presence of ecological filtering processes in these areas. Furthermore, I found that species traits determined community structural responses to environmental change and this had strong flow-on effects to rates of dung removal. Shifts in trait distributions explained dung removal rates above and beyond total beetle mass, suggesting that neutral processes alone could not explain functional efficiency. In particular, habitat regeneration resulted in the assembly of communities with high total beetle mass and on-average smaller beetles, which was optimal for functional efficiency. In conclusion, the restoration of adjacent matrix habitat was shown to effectively mitigate edge effects on dung beetle community structure resulting in the re-establishment of important associated ecosystem processes.
25

Caractérisation fonctionnelle des stratégies de compétition pour les ressources aériennes et souterraines au sein d’une gamme d’espèces végétales : application à la régulation biologique des adventices par les plantes de services dans l'agrosystème bananier antillais / Functional characterization of strategies of competition for above-ground and below-ground resources of a range of species from French West Indies banana systems : application to the biological regulation of weeds with cover plants

Tardy, Florence 01 December 2015 (has links)
Les agroécosystèmes bananiers aux Antilles, longtemps menés en monocultures intensives, ont pris le virage d’une gestion agro-écologique depuis la mise en place du Plan Banane Durable en 2009. Pour atteindre l’objectif de diminution de l’utilisation des intrants chimiques, l’introduction de plantes de services (PdS) destinées à accomplir des services écosystémiques est à l’étude pour concilier au mieux les enjeux agronomiques et environnementaux. Parmi ces services, la régulation biologique des adventices par les PdS nécessite d’introduire des espèces ayant une bonne aptitude à la compétition pour la lumière vis-à-vis des adventices. Néanmoins la réalisation de ce service ne doit pas engendrer un dis-service vis à vis de la production agricole par les bananiers en provoquant une compétition pour les ressources minérales et hydriques du sol. Une bonne connaissance des processus de compétition aérienne et souterraine mis en place par les PdS est alors indispensable pour raisonner leur utilisation dans le système de culture. Nous avons choisi une approche par traits fonctionnels pour caractériser les espèces de cet agrosystème très anthropisé car l’étude exhaustive de processus écophysiologiques n’est pas adaptée pour le grand panel de plantes de services potentiellement utilisables. Nous faisons l’hypothèse qu’une combinaison de valeur de traits fonctionnels liés à l’acquisition et l’utilisation des ressources du milieu reflète une stratégie de compétition. Les objectifs de cette thèse sont de 1) caractériser un panel d’espèces de PdS potentielles et d’adventices ainsi que deux cultivars de bananiers selon des traits fonctionnels liés à l’acquisition et l’utilisation des ressources aériennes et souterraines, 2) identifier des stratégies de compétition sur la base des combinaisons de valeur de traits obtenus pour chaque espèce et 3) comparer les effets compétitifs des espèces en fonction de leur stratégie de compétition. Cette étude repose sur un travail bibliographique pour identifier les traits d’intérêts, une première expérimentation au champ pour caractériser la stratégie de compétition des différentes espèces par la mesure de traits fonctionnels sur des plantes isolées et en situation de ressources non limitantes et sur une deuxième expérimentation au champ pour caractériser les relations de compétition entre espèces en fonction de leur stratégie respective. L’analyse des résultats a permis de construire deux classifications des espèces en fonction de leur stratégie, l’une basée sur les traits de compétition pour la lumière et l’autre basée sur les traits de compétition pour les ressources du sol. Nos résultats ont permis de distinguer 4 stratégies de compétition aérienne pour la lumière (« ombrage », « obstruction », « étouffement faible », étouffement fort») et 4 stratégies de compétition souterraine pour les ressources du sol (« exploration », « occupation », « exploitation », « neutre »). Les espèces du panel ont été replacées sur les grands axes de différenciation d’espèces de l’écologie opposant des stratégies de conservation et de capture des ressources. Les résultats ne mettent pas en évidence de liens entre stratégies aériennes et souterraines. Ces classifications fonctionnelles peuvent être utilisées pour identifier les espèces les plus adaptées, a priori, au contrôle des adventices dans le système de culture bananier aux Antilles. L’utilisation de traits fonctionnels dans un contexte agronomique a permis d’acquérir une meilleure connaissance des aptitudes des espèces à la compétition et ouvre des perspectives quant à la création d’un outil d’aide au choix des espèces composant des couverts multi-espèces. / Banana agro-ecosystems in the French West Indies have relied for a long time on intensive monocultures. A shift to agroecological management practices have been made since the “Plan Banane Durable” program in 2009. To achieve the aim of reducing the use of chemical inputs, the introduction of cover plants to deliver agroecosystem services under study to reconcile agronomic and environmental issues. These services include the biological control of weeds by cover plants which requires to introduce cover plant species with a good ability to compete for light towards weeds. However the introduction of cover plants should not cause a dis-service by reducing the production of bananas through a competition for mineral and water soil resources. A better knowledge of aboveground and belowground competition process by cover plants is then essential to reason their use in cropping systems. We chose an approach based on functional traits to characterize plant species from this very anthropized agroecosystem because an exhaustive study of the ecophysiological processes underlying competition is not suitable for a large panel of potentially useful cover plant species. We assume that a combination of values of functional traits related to the acquisition and use of resources reflects a strategy of competition. The objectives of this thesis were 1) to characterize a panel of potential cover plant and weed species as well as two banana cultivars according to functional traits related to the acquisition and use of aboveground and belowground resources, 2) identify competition strategies on the basis of the combinations of trait values obtained for each species and 3) comparing the competitive effects of the species as a function of their competition strategies. This study is based on a bibliographic work to identify traits of interest, a first field experiment to characterize the competition strategy of the different species by measuring functional traits on plants grown individually and in non-limiting resources conditions and a second field experiment to characterize the competitive relationships between species according to their respective competitive strategies. The analysis of the results allowed us to build two classifications of species according to their strategy, one based on competitive traits for light and the other one based on the competitive traits for soil resources. Our results allowed to distinguish four aboveground competition strategies for light ("shade", "obstruction," "smothering low”," strong smothering ") and four belowground competition strategies for soil resources (" exploration "," occupation "" exploitation, "" neutral "). The species of the panel were replaced on the main axes of differentiation between species in ecology opposing resource conservation and capture strategies. The results do not show links between aboveground and belowground strategies. These functional classifications can be used to identify the most qualified species, a priori, to be used in banana cropping systems of the French West Indies. The use of functional traits in an agronomic context enabled us to acquire a better knowledge of the species competition abilities and opens perspectives for the establishment of a decision-making tool for the choice of species to include in multi-species cover.
26

Plant Migration along Freeways In and Around an Arid Urban Area: Phoenix, Arizona

January 2010 (has links)
abstract: General ecological thought pertaining to plant biology, conservation, and urban areas has rested on two potentially contradictory underlying assumptions. The first is that non-native plants can spread easily from human developments to “pristine” areas. The second is that native plants cannot disperse through developed areas. Both assume anthropogenic changes to ecosystems create conditions that favor non-native plants and hinder native species. However, it is just as likely that anthropogenic alterations of habitats will favor certain groups of plant species with similar functional traits, whether native or not. Migration of plants can be divided into the following stages: dispersal, germination, establishment, reproduction and spread. Functional traits of species determine which are most successful at each of the stages of invasion or range enlargement. I studied the traits that allow both native and non-native plant species to disperse into freeway corridors, germinate, establish, reproduce, and then disperse along those corridors in Phoenix, Arizona. Field methods included seed bank sample collection and germination, vegetation surveys, and seed trapping. I also evaluated concentrations of plant-available nitrate as a result of localized nitrogen deposition. While many plant species found on the roadsides are either landscape varieties or typical weedy species, some uncommon native species and unexpected non-native species were also encountered. Maintenance regimes greatly influence the amount of vegetative cover and species composition along roadsides. Understanding which traits permit success at various stages of the invasion process indicates whether it is native, non-native, or species with particular traits that are likely to move through the city and establish in the desert. In a related case study conducted in Victoria, Australia, transportation professionals and ecologists were surveyed regarding preferences for roadside landscape design. Roadside design and maintenance projects are typically influenced by different groups of transportation professionals at various stages in a linear project cycle. Landscape architects and design professionals have distinct preferences and priorities compared to other transportation professionals and trained ecologists. The case study reveals the need for collaboration throughout the stages of design, construction and maintenance in order to efficiently manage roadsides for multiple priorities. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Biology 2010
27

Improving ecological forecasts using model and data constraints

Shiklomanov, Alexey Nikolaevich 27 November 2018 (has links)
Terrestrial ecosystems are essential to human well-being, but their future remains highly uncertain, as evidenced by the huge disparities in model projections of the land carbon sink. The existence of these disparities despite the recent explosion of novel data streams, including the TRY plant traits database, the Landsat archive, and global eddy covariance tower networks, suggests that these data streams are not being utilized to their full potential by the terrestrial ecosystem modeling community. Therefore, the overarching objective of my dissertation is to identify how these various data streams can be used to improve the precision of model predictions by constraining model parameters. In chapter 1, I use a hierarchical multivariate meta-analysis of the TRY database to assess the dependence of trait correlations on ecological scale and evaluate the utility of these correlations for constraining ecosystem model parameters. I find that global trait correlations are generally consistent within plant functional types, and leveraging the multivariate trait space is an effective way to constrain trait estimates for data-limited traits and plant functional types. My next two chapters assess the ability to measure traits using remote sensing by exploring the links between leaf traits and reflectance spectra. In chapter 2, I introduce a method for estimating traits from spectra via radiative transfer model inversion. I then use this approach to show that although the precise location, width, and quantity of spectral bands significantly affects trait retrieval accuracy, a wide range of sensor configurations are capable of providing trait information. In chapter 3, I apply this approach to a large database of leaf spectra to show that traits vary as much within as across species, and much more across species within a functional type than across functional types. Finally, in chapter 4, I synthesize the findings of the previous chapters to calibrate a vegetation model's representation of canopy radiative transfer against observed remotely-sensed surface reflectance. Although the calibration successfully constrained canopy structural parameters, I identify issues with model representations of wood and soil reflectance that inhibit its ability to accurately reproduce remote sensing observations.
28

Changes of the vegetation of wet meadows depending on management / Changes of the vegetation of wet meadows depending on management

HORNÍK, Jan January 2015 (has links)
Central Europe wet meadows are characterized by considerable species richness. The biodiversity maintenance of the wet meadows is connected with regular management (i.e. grazing or mowing). As their area drastically decreased due to changes in land use in the last century, they have become the object of interest among scientists, conservation biologists. This thesis is composed of three original studies which are focused on escribing diversity patterns of the whole spectra of wet meadows at landscape level and dynamic of their changes depending on different management regimes (mowing/abandonment,fertilizing/unfertilizing). The synthesis of these studies reveals the description of the processes underlying the wet meadows species loss depending on land use changes and proposes the principles for sustainable conservation management.
29

Dinâmica da sucessão liquênica : padrões estruturais e funcionais como indicadores de regeneração florestal

Koch, Natália Mossmann January 2012 (has links)
A estrutura e a dinâmica da vegetação de uma floresta refletem a complexa interação entre eventos de distúrbios e processos de regeneração que atuam em múltiplas escalas temporais e espaciais. Compreender como esses processos ocorrem é de extrema importância para a conservação e o manejo das florestas. Os liquens são organismos sensíveis às mudanças ambientais, e constituem boas alternativas para o entendimento das alterações que ocorrem na floresta durante o processo de sucessão. O acesso a essas alterações pode ser feito tanto a partir da composição e riqueza de espécies dos liquens, como de atributos funcionais comuns entre diferentes espécies, abordagem que permite comparar comunidades com biogeografias distintas. Frente a isso, esta dissertação tem como objetivos principais (i) determinar os padrões estruturais da sucessão liquênica, quanto a composição, cobertura e riqueza de espécies, ao longo do gradiente de sucessão florestal, (ii) verificar a influência do ambiente e do espaço na variação das comunidades de liquens e as relações entre características ambientais dos estágios sucessionais com a composição e a taxa de substituição de espécies, (iii) determinar os padrões de organização funcional das comunidades de liquens durante a regeneração da floresta, (iv) verificar a diversidade funcional dessas comunidades e (v) verificar a possibilidade da utilização de atributos funcionais de liquens como indicadores dos estágios de sucessão florestal. Um total de 188 táxons de liquens foram amostrados em 24 unidades amostrais, divididas em três estágios de sucessão (6-10; 12-20; e 40-60 anos de regeneração após o abandono). Os resultados corroboram a hipótese principal de que as comunidades de liquens se modificam tanto estrutural quanto funcionalmente, conforme a estrutura da floresta se altera ao longo do gradiente de sucessão. Há mudanças na composição, riqueza de espécies e quanto aos atributos funcionais, estes últimos relacionados ao tipo morfológico e a algumas estruturas reprodutivas. Além disso, os resultados indicam menor turnover de espécies dentro das unidades amostrais dos estágios avançados, uma taxa maior de diversidade beta entre unidades mais distintas ao longo do gradiente de sucessão florestal e maior explicação do ambiente na variação da composição. Comunidades de liquens em florestas tropicais respondem, portanto, às modificações resultantes da sucessão ecológica, e podem servir como uma ferramenta na caracterização de áreas em estágios de regeneração e/ou conservação distintos. Esses resultados reforçam a importância dos liquens como bioindicadores das condições florestais. / Vegetation structure and dynamics in a forest reflect the complex interaction between disturbance events and regeneration processes which may act in several scales, such as temporal and spatial. In order to improve forest conservation and management, it is extremely important to comprehend how these processes occur in nature. Lichens, which are sensitive to environmental changes, are good alternatives for the understanding of forest changes due to forest succession. These changes may be acessed from lichen composition and lichen species richness, as well as from lichen functional traits, which makes possible to compare communities with distinct biogeography. Therefore, this Master’s Thesis has as main objectives to (i) determine structural patterns of lichen succession, based on composition, cover and species richness along the forest succession gradient, (ii) verify environmental and spatial influence in lichen community variation and the relation among successional stages environmental characteristics with composition and species turnover rate, (iii) determine patterns of functional organization of lichen communities during forest regeneration, (iv) verify the functional diversity of these communities and (v) verify the possibilty of using lichens functional traits as indicators of forest succession stages. A total of 188 lichen taxa were sampled in 24 sampling sites, which were split into three succession stages (from 6-10; 12-20; and 40-60 years of regeneration after being abandoned). Results confirm the main hypothesis that lichen communities change as forest structure changes along the successional gradient, regarding their structure and also functionally. There are changes in composition, species richness and functional traits, these traits related to lichen growing forms and to some reproductive structures. Besides, results also indicate less species turnover in older sampling sites, a greater beta diversity rate among more distinct sampling sites along forest succession gradient and a higher environmental explanation in composition variation. Lichen communities in tropical forests are therefore showing changes due to forest succession and may be used as another tool in characterizing areas in distinct stages of regeneration and/or conservation. These results also reinforce the importance of using lichens as bioindicators of forest conditions.
30

Integrando processos evolutivos e ecológicos no estudo de redes de interações

Bastazini, Vinícius Augusto Galvão January 2015 (has links)
Compreender como as espécies interagem e como a topologia de redes ecológicas influencia a dinâmica de populações e comunidades tem sido um dos principais objetivos de estudos ecológicos há mais de um século. Apesar desta longa tradição, o estudo de redes ecológicas tem aumentado drasticamente nas últimas duas décadas. No entanto, só recentemente ecólogos começaram a ir além da descrição de padrões topológicos e passaram a integrar outros dados biológicos importantes, como características funcionais e filogenia. Esta tese teve principalmente dois objetivos: i) desenvolver novas abordagens analíticas capazes de integrar informações funcionais e filogenéticas, a fim de descrever padrões estruturais em redes ecológicas, e ii) compreender a influência de dinâmicas eco-evolutivas na robustez de redes mutualísticas. No Capítulo I, desenvolvi uma abordagem analítica integradora para particionar os efeitos da filogenia e de características funcionais sobre a estrutura de redes de interação biótica. O método combina Teoria de Conjuntos Difusos e correlação matricial. Eu também desenvolvi um estudo de simulação para testar a acurácia da metodologia proposta em termos de Erro Tipo I. As simulações demonstram que o método é acurado, ou seja, rejeita incorretamente uma hipótese nula verdadeira em ~ 5% dos casos. No Capítulo II, investiguei como diferentes cenários de extinção afetam a robustez de uma rede de dispersão de sementes do sul do Brasil, incluindo cenários onde as espécies são eliminadas com base em sua distinção evolutiva e funcional. Os resultados indicam que a perda de espécies generalistas e diversidade funcional faz com que rede seja mais propensa a colapsar. No Capítulo III, desenvolvi uma investigação teórica sobre a influencia de diferentes modos de evolução de atributos sobre a robustez de redes mutualísticas que estão sofrendo um ataque funcional. Os resultados mostram que, apesar da pequena faixa de variação na robustez das redes, o modo de evolução dos atributos, e a interação entre modos de evolução de cada conjunto de espécies que interagem, influenciam a robustez de redes ecológicas, especialmente em casos extremos, onde os atributos das espécies apresentam sinal filogenético muito baixo ou muito forte. / Understanding how species interact and how the topology of ecological networks influences the dynamics of populations and communities has been mindboggling ecologists for over a century now. Despite this long tradition, the study of complex ecological networks has increased dramatically in the past two decades. Nonetheless, only recently ecologists have started to move beyond the description of topological patterns and started to integrate other important biological data, such as functional traits and phylogenies. Therefore, the aim of this dissertation was mainly two-fold: develop new analytical approaches capable to integrate functional and phylogenetic information in order to describe structural patterns in ecological networks, and to understand the effects of ecoevolutionary dynamics on network robustness. In Chapter I, I developed a new and integrative analytical framework to partition the effects of phylogenies and functional traits on the structure of ecological networks. The method combines fuzzy set theory and matrix correlation. I also developed a simulation study to test the accuracy of the framework I proposed. My simulation study demonstrates that the method is accurate, i.e., incorrectly rejecting a true null hypothesis in ~ 5%. In Chapter II, I investigated how different extinction scenarios affect the robustness of a seed dispersal network, from southern Brazil, including scenarios where species are eliminated based on their evolutionary and functional distinctiveness. The results indicate that loss of generalist species and functional diversity makes the system more likely to collapse. In Chapter III, I developed a theoretical investigation of the role of distinct trait evolution modes on the robustness of mutualistic networks undergoing functional trait extinctions. My results show that, despite the small range of variation in network robustness, the mode of trait evolution alone and the interaction between modes of evolution of each set of interacting species matter for network robustness, especially in extreme cases, where species traits present either very low or very strong phylogenetic signal.

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