Tovar Carolina, Sánchez Infantas Edgar, Teixeira Roth Vanessa
Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina, Av. La Molina s/n, Lima, Peru.
PLoS One. 2018 Jan 2;13(1):e0190572. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190572. eCollection 2018.
Despite El Niño events being one of the main forces shaping the coastal desert vegetation in South America, the impacts of the high precipitation typical of this rare but recurrent climatic event remain understudied. Here we monitored the plant community of a coastal lomas, a seasonal desert ecosystem, during 1998 and 2001 to analyse its changes during the 1997-98 El Niño and the following La Niña events. We measured species abundance and vegetation cover in 31 plots, and recorded climate variables in Lomas de Lachay, Peru. We found a significant positive correlation between precipitation and vegetation cover, density, alpha diversity (species diversity at the plot level), total richness and abundance of several key species but no correlation with gamma diversity (species diversity at the whole loma level). During the El Niño event, the seasonality, typical of the lomas ecosystem, disappeared, as evidenced by both the similarity of species composition and mean vegetation cover values between most sampling campaigns of 1998 and 1999. Moreover, total richness was lower during the El Niño event than during the humid season of 2000 and 2001 resulting from the dominance of only a few species, such as Nicotiana paniculata and Loasa urens. Temporal-spatial changes in the abundance of the dominant species caused the differences between alpha and gamma diversity, especially during 1999. Within that year, mean alpha diversity showed similar values whilst gamma diversity values were different. The reestablishment of the seasonality of most plant community characteristics and a clear difference between species composition of the humid and the dry season occurred two years after the El Niño event, suggesting a resilient community. This study provides one of the few quantifications of the Peruvian lomas' response to the 1997-98 El Niño event and the following La Niña, one of the most extreme climatic events in the last century.
尽管厄尔尼诺事件是塑造南美洲沿海沙漠植被的主要力量之一,但这种罕见却反复出现的气候事件所带来的高降水量的影响仍未得到充分研究。在此,我们在1998年至2001年期间监测了一个沿海雾林(一种季节性沙漠生态系统)的植物群落,以分析其在1997 - 1998年厄尔尼诺事件及随后的拉尼娜事件期间的变化。我们在31个样地中测量了物种丰富度和植被覆盖度,并记录了秘鲁拉查伊雾林的气候变量。我们发现降水量与植被覆盖度、密度、阿尔法多样性(样地水平的物种多样性)、总丰富度以及几种关键物种的丰度之间存在显著正相关,但与伽马多样性(整个雾林水平的物种多样性)无相关性。在厄尔尼诺事件期间,雾林生态系统典型的季节性消失了,这在1998年和1999年的大多数采样活动中物种组成和平均植被覆盖度值的相似性中得到了证明。此外,由于少数物种(如圆锥烟草和粗刺草)占主导地位,厄尔尼诺事件期间的总丰富度低于2000年和2001年的湿润季节。优势物种丰度的时空变化导致了阿尔法多样性和伽马多样性之间的差异,特别是在1999年。在那一年,平均阿尔法多样性显示出相似的值,而伽马多样性值则不同。大多数植物群落特征的季节性重新建立以及湿润季节和干燥季节物种组成的明显差异在厄尔尼诺事件两年后出现,这表明该群落具有恢复力。这项研究提供了为数不多的对秘鲁雾林对1997 - 1998年厄尔尼诺事件及随后的拉尼娜事件(上世纪最极端的气候事件之一)的响应的量化研究。