期刊
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 93, 期 1, 页码 73-83出版社
BOTANICAL SOC AMER INC
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.93.1.73
关键词
epiphytes; ferns; mid-domain effect; pteridophytes; species richness; tropical mountains
To better understand changes in the distribution and diversity within plant functional types along an elevational gradient and the potential mechanisms driving such changes, we studied species richness of ferns at six elevations along a forested elevational gradient in Costa Rica, from La Selva Biological Station at 30 m a.s.l. up the slopes of Volcan Barva to 2960 m a.s.l. Among the samples from all the sites combined, we found 264 species from 60 genera. Sixty-nine species were terrestrial, 113 were canopy epiphytes, and 121 were low-trunk epiphytes. Only one species occupied both canopy and terrestrial habitats at any of the study sites. Overlap of canopy and low-trunk species composition was relatively low (18%), and lower still was the overlap of terrestrial and low-trunk species (12%). Total species richness peaked at the 1000-m site for canopy and low-trunk epiphytic species. In contrast, the richness of terrestrial species rose to a mid-elevation maximum and remained relatively constant at higher elevations. In an effort to explain elevational patterns of species richness, we examined mean annual rainfall and temperature, light intensities in the canopy and at ground level, and the mid-domain effect. Of the explanatory factors examined, the mid-domain effect accounted for most of the elevational pattern. We found little evidence that environmental gradients drive patterns of fern species richness on this spatial scale.
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