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Dryad

Data from: Environmental heterogeneity influences liana community differentiation across a Neotropical rainforest landscape

Data files

Mar 14, 2024 version files 138.90 KB

Abstract

We examined the variation in the liana community composition and structure across geopedological land units to test the hypothesis that environmental heterogeneity is a driving force in the liana community assembly. At the Los Tuxtlas Tropical Biology Station, SE Mexico (640 ha of tropical rain forest), we sampled all lianas with basal diameter ≥ 1 cm in three 0.5-ha plots established in each of five land units (totaling 15 plots and 7.5 ha). We censused 6055 individuals and 110 species. Overall, the most speciose families were also the most abundant ones. The density and basal area (m2) of some dominant liana species differed among land units, and a permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA) and a non-metric multidimensional scaling ordination (NMDS) revealed differences in the presence, density, and basal area of liana species across the landscape. Liana composition and structure were highly heterogeneous among land units, suggesting that variations in soil water availability and relief are key drivers of liana community spatial differentiation. By showing that soil and topography play an important role at the landscape scale, we underscore the ecological relevance of environmental heterogeneity for liana community assembly. In the future, as our ability to assess the local environmental complexity increases, we will gain a better understanding of the liana community assembly process and its heterogeneous distribution in tropical forests.