Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico

Ecological theory suggests that environmental filtering (the survival or elimination of species in the community in response to environmental constraints) is a key process in the species assemblages of communities. Environmental filters, such as sand movement and soil salinity in coastal dunes and b...

ver descrição completa

Detalhes bibliográficos
Principais autores: Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández, Maria Luisa Martínez Vázquez
Formato: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Publicado em: Ecoscience 2011
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha:http://inecol.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1005/263
_version_ 1799772168492417024
author Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández
Maria Luisa Martínez Vázquez
author_facet Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández
Maria Luisa Martínez Vázquez
author_sort Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández
collection REPO
description Ecological theory suggests that environmental filtering (the survival or elimination of species in the community in response to environmental constraints) is a key process in the species assemblages of communities. Environmental filters, such as sand movement and soil salinity in coastal dunes and beaches, may result in shared ecological tolerances and functional types, independently of phylogenetic and evolutionary history. In 19 beach?foredune sites located along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico we studied plant functional composition and diversity of vascular plants. Functional groups were determined with a classification analysis. Relative importance values and diversity indices of species and functional groups were compared with ANOVA tests. We distinguished 5 groups: a group of species tolerant to soil salinity and burial, most abundant on accreting beaches; a group of species tolerant only to burial, which were abundant on all coasts; and 3 groups that lacked specific responses to burial and soil salinity and were most abundant on stable and erosive coasts. Accreting foredunes showed the lowest species richness and functional diversity, because only a few species were tolerant to burial and soil salinity. In the foredune environment, sediment dynamics and geomorphological processes act as environmental filters that largely determine the floristic and functional composition of the community.
format info:eu-repo/semantics/article
id repo-1005-263
institution Repositorio INECOL
publishDate 2011
publisher Ecoscience
record_format dspace
spelling repo-1005-2632018-06-13T20:26:54Z Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández Maria Luisa Martínez Vázquez Ecoscience 2011 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Ecological theory suggests that environmental filtering (the survival or elimination of species in the community in response to environmental constraints) is a key process in the species assemblages of communities. Environmental filters, such as sand movement and soil salinity in coastal dunes and beaches, may result in shared ecological tolerances and functional types, independently of phylogenetic and evolutionary history. In 19 beach?foredune sites located along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico we studied plant functional composition and diversity of vascular plants. Functional groups were determined with a classification analysis. Relative importance values and diversity indices of species and functional groups were compared with ANOVA tests. We distinguished 5 groups: a group of species tolerant to soil salinity and burial, most abundant on accreting beaches; a group of species tolerant only to burial, which were abundant on all coasts; and 3 groups that lacked specific responses to burial and soil salinity and were most abundant on stable and erosive coasts. Accreting foredunes showed the lowest species richness and functional diversity, because only a few species were tolerant to burial and soil salinity. In the foredune environment, sediment dynamics and geomorphological processes act as environmental filters that largely determine the floristic and functional composition of the community. info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2 info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2 http://inecol.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1005/263 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess citation:Juan B. Gallego-Fernández, Martínez Vázquez M.L. 2011. Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico. Ecoscience. 18: 52-62 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 application/pdf
spellingShingle info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
Juan Bautista Gallego Fernández
Maria Luisa Martínez Vázquez
Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title_full Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title_fullStr Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title_short Environmental filtering and plant functional types on Mexican foredunes along the Gulf of Mexico
title_sort environmental filtering and plant functional types on mexican foredunes along the gulf of mexico
topic info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
url http://inecol.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1005/263
work_keys_str_mv AT juanbautistagallegofernandez environmentalfilteringandplantfunctionaltypesonmexicanforedunesalongthegulfofmexico
AT marialuisamartinezvazquez environmentalfilteringandplantfunctionaltypesonmexicanforedunesalongthegulfofmexico