Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico

Abstract Elevation gradients have been widely documented, but few studies have compared patterns of variation between contrasting transects. Our objective was to compare vegetation structure and tree species composition of forest communities on 2 extended gradients located along the Pacific coast (Oaxaca, 0-3,600 m), and the Gulf of Mexico coast (Veracruz, 70-4,000 m), Mexico. We established 21 one-ha plots on each gradient. A total of 4,229 trees were measured and identified. Results showed that with increased elevation, basal area decreased unimodally in Oaxaca, and increased monotonically in Veracruz, whereas taxa richness decreased non-linearly in both gradients. Oaxaca was warmer and drier than Veracruz, however, richness was higher in Oaxaca (260 species) than in Veracruz (210 species). A multinomial classification model identified 58 species as Oaxaca specialist and 41 as Veracruz specialists, but only 12 species were generalist in both gradients. Canonical correspondence analyses for species, genus, and family consistently separated dry forests related to temperature and potential evapotranspiration from high elevation conifer forests. Mid-elevation montane forest differed between gradients. We conclude that climate is differentially important in vegetation structure and taxa distribution, but geographical location and disturbance history should be discussed for each gradient.

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Main Authors: Salas-Morales,Silvia H., Williams-Linera,Guadalupe
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto de Biología 2019
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1870-34532019000100633
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spelling oai:scielo:S1870-345320190001006332020-05-01Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, MexicoSalas-Morales,Silvia H.Williams-Linera,Guadalupe Disturbance history Multinomial classification model Oaxaca Precipitation Species richness Temperature Vegetation structure Veracruz Abstract Elevation gradients have been widely documented, but few studies have compared patterns of variation between contrasting transects. Our objective was to compare vegetation structure and tree species composition of forest communities on 2 extended gradients located along the Pacific coast (Oaxaca, 0-3,600 m), and the Gulf of Mexico coast (Veracruz, 70-4,000 m), Mexico. We established 21 one-ha plots on each gradient. A total of 4,229 trees were measured and identified. Results showed that with increased elevation, basal area decreased unimodally in Oaxaca, and increased monotonically in Veracruz, whereas taxa richness decreased non-linearly in both gradients. Oaxaca was warmer and drier than Veracruz, however, richness was higher in Oaxaca (260 species) than in Veracruz (210 species). A multinomial classification model identified 58 species as Oaxaca specialist and 41 as Veracruz specialists, but only 12 species were generalist in both gradients. Canonical correspondence analyses for species, genus, and family consistently separated dry forests related to temperature and potential evapotranspiration from high elevation conifer forests. Mid-elevation montane forest differed between gradients. We conclude that climate is differentially important in vegetation structure and taxa distribution, but geographical location and disturbance history should be discussed for each gradient.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto de BiologíaRevista mexicana de biodiversidad v.90 20192019-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1870-34532019000100633en10.22201/ib.20078706e.2019.90.3059
institution SCIELO
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country México
countrycode MX
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-mx
tag revista
region America del Norte
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Salas-Morales,Silvia H.
Williams-Linera,Guadalupe
spellingShingle Salas-Morales,Silvia H.
Williams-Linera,Guadalupe
Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
author_facet Salas-Morales,Silvia H.
Williams-Linera,Guadalupe
author_sort Salas-Morales,Silvia H.
title Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
title_short Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
title_full Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
title_fullStr Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in Oaxaca and Veracruz, Mexico
title_sort patterns of vegetation along contrasting elevation gradients in oaxaca and veracruz, mexico
description Abstract Elevation gradients have been widely documented, but few studies have compared patterns of variation between contrasting transects. Our objective was to compare vegetation structure and tree species composition of forest communities on 2 extended gradients located along the Pacific coast (Oaxaca, 0-3,600 m), and the Gulf of Mexico coast (Veracruz, 70-4,000 m), Mexico. We established 21 one-ha plots on each gradient. A total of 4,229 trees were measured and identified. Results showed that with increased elevation, basal area decreased unimodally in Oaxaca, and increased monotonically in Veracruz, whereas taxa richness decreased non-linearly in both gradients. Oaxaca was warmer and drier than Veracruz, however, richness was higher in Oaxaca (260 species) than in Veracruz (210 species). A multinomial classification model identified 58 species as Oaxaca specialist and 41 as Veracruz specialists, but only 12 species were generalist in both gradients. Canonical correspondence analyses for species, genus, and family consistently separated dry forests related to temperature and potential evapotranspiration from high elevation conifer forests. Mid-elevation montane forest differed between gradients. We conclude that climate is differentially important in vegetation structure and taxa distribution, but geographical location and disturbance history should be discussed for each gradient.
publisher Instituto de Biología
publishDate 2019
url http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1870-34532019000100633
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