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Dryad

Data from: Do flood pulses structure amphibian communities in floodplain environments?

Cite this dataset

Ramalho, Werther Pereira; Machado, Ibere Farina; Vieira, Lisandro Juno Soares (2017). Data from: Do flood pulses structure amphibian communities in floodplain environments? [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6nt37

Abstract

Beta diversity can provide insights into the processes that regulate communities subjected to frequent disturbances, such as flood pulses, which control biodiversity in floodplains. However, little is known about which processes structure beta diversity of amphibians in floodplains. Here, we tested the influence of flood pulses on the richness, composition, and beta diversity of amphibians in Amazonian floodplain environments. We also evaluated indicator species for each environment. We established linear transects in three environments: low várzea, high várzea, and macrophyte rafts. Species richness decreased and beta diversity increased according to the susceptibility of habitats to flood pulses. Indicator species differed among environments according to forest succession promoted by the flood pulse. The decrease in species richness between high and low várzea is due to non-random extinctions. The higher rates of species turnover between várzeas and macrophyte rafts are driven by the colonization of species adapted to open areas. Our results highlight that the maintenance of complex environments is needed to protect biodiversity in floodplains.

Usage notes

Location

Amazon