Habitat amount and ambient temperature dictate patterns of anuran diversity along a subtropical elevational gradient
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dc.contributor.author |
Carvalho-Rocha, Vítor |
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dc.contributor.author |
Peres, Carlos A. |
|
dc.contributor.author |
Neckel-Oliveira, Selvino |
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dc.date.accessioned |
2021-10-13T18:07:02Z |
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dc.date.available |
2021-10-13T18:07:02Z |
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dc.date.issued |
2021-02 |
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dc.identifier.citation |
Carvalho-Rocha, V., Peres, C.P., Neckel-Oliveira, S. 2021. Habitat amount and ambient temperature dictate patterns of anuran diversity along a subtropical elevational gradient. Diversity and Distributions. 2021;27:344–359. |
pt_BR |
dc.identifier.uri |
https://repositorio.ufsc.br/handle/123456789/229001 |
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dc.description |
Este artigo apresenta o padrão de diversidade de anfíbios em lagoas ao longo de um gradiente elevacional na Serra de Santa Catarina. Esta pesquisa é parte da tese de doutorado do aluno Vitor de Carvalho Rocha, desenvolvida no âmbito do projeto PELD-BISC. |
pt_BR |
dc.description.abstract |
Aim: Patterns of diversity along elevational gradients are driven by species characteristics but remain poorly understood. Filling this gap is imperative given the deteriorating conservation status of anurans worldwide. Here, we examine frog diversity
and species composition along a sharp subtropical elevational gradient and assess
the degree to which these are determined by environmental and spatial predictors.
Location: An extensive southern Brazilian Atlantic Forest elevational gradient ranging from 300 to 1,800 m above sea level.
Methods: We sampled 38 ponds and used structural equation modelling to examine
the direct and indirect effects of area, climate, habitat amount, habitat complexity
and productivity on frog species richness and abundance. We also applied joint species distribution models to investigate the importance of these predictors on frog
species composition using species distribution and co-occurrence along the elevational gradient.
Results: We recorded 12,636 individuals of 41 frog species. Frog species richness
was highest at intermediate elevations, showing a hump-shaped pattern. Frog abundance was highest at lowlands and decreased towards higher elevations. We found
support for only the habitat amount hypothesis in explaining overall species richness.
Although temperature had a positive influence on productivity and frog abundance,
neither predictors were related to species richness. Species composition diverged
markedly between lowland and highland frog assemblages, which was mainly attributed to differences in ambient temperature.
Main conclusion: Elevations containing more extensive natural habitat areas retained
the most species-rich frog assemblages. The mid-elevational peak is likely attributed
to lowland habitat (<800 masl) heterogeneity and extreme climatic conditions in
highland areas (>1,400 masl). The entire elevational gradient is, however, critical in
maintaining anuran species diversity as lowland assemblages are distinct from those
at mid- to high elevations. Our study also shows that anthropogenic habitat loss has a
decisive effect on montane frog diversity, reinforcing the need to effectively protect
these areas. |
pt_BR |
dc.description.sponsorship |
Brazilian Program for Biodiversity Research (PPBio)
Atlantic Forest Network (CNPq no 457451/2012-9) and PELD/BISC/
FAPESC (CNPq/CAPES/FAPs/BC-Fundo Newton no 15/2016 and
FAPESC/2018TR0928) |
pt_BR |
dc.language.iso |
en |
pt_BR |
dc.publisher |
John Wiley & Sons Ltd |
pt_BR |
dc.subject |
Conservation |
pt_BR |
dc.subject |
Subtropical areas |
pt_BR |
dc.subject |
Santa Catarina State |
pt_BR |
dc.title |
Habitat amount and ambient temperature dictate patterns of anuran diversity along a subtropical elevational gradient |
pt_BR |
dc.type |
Article |
pt_BR |
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