English
Español
Log In
Email address
Password
Log in
Have you forgotten your password?
Communities & Collections
Research Outputs
Projects
Researchers
Statistics
Investigación Indoamérica
English
Español
Log In
Email address
Password
Log in
Have you forgotten your password?
Home
CRIS
Publications
The role of plant secondary metabolites in shaping regional and local plant community assembly
Export
Statistics
Options
The role of plant secondary metabolites in shaping regional and local plant community assembly
Journal
Journal of Ecology
Date Issued
2022
Author(s)
Endara M.-J.
Centro de Investigación de la Biodiversidad y Cambio Climático
Soule A.J.
Forrister D.L.
Dexter K.G.
Pennington R.T
Nicholls J.A.
Loiseau O.
Kursar T.A.
Coley P.D.
Type
Article
DOI
10.1111/1365-2745.13646
URL
https://cris.indoamerica.edu.ec/handle/123456789/8658
Abstract
The outstanding diversity of Amazonian forests is predicted to be the result of several processes. While tree lineages have dispersed repeatedly across the Amazon, interactions between plants and insects may be the principal mechanism structuring the communities at local scales. Using metabolomic and phylogenetic approaches, we investigated the patterns of historical assembly of plant communities across the Amazon based on the Neotropical genus of trees Inga (Leguminosae) at four, widely separated sites. Our results show a low degree of phylogenetic structure and a mixing of chemotypes across the whole Amazon basin, suggesting that although biogeography may play a role, the metacommunity for any local community in the Amazon is the entire basin. Yet, local communities are assembled by ecological processes, with the suite of Inga at a given site more divergent in chemical defences than expected by chance Synthesis. To our knowledge, this is the first study to present metabolomic data for nearly 100 species in a diverse Neotropical plant clade across the whole Amazonia. Our results demonstrate a role for plant–herbivore interactions in shaping the clade's community assembly at a local scale, and suggest that the high alpha diversity in Amazonian tree communities must be due in part to the interactions of diverse tree lineages with their natural enemies providing a high number of niche dimensions. © 2021 British Ecological Society
Subjects
Andes; Cities; Enviro...
Views
2
Acquisition Date
Apr 3, 2025
View Details
google-scholar
View Details
Downloads
View Details