Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Center for Latin American Studies, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Ecology. 2023 Dec;104(12):e4174. doi: 10.1002/ecy.4174. Epub 2023 Nov 12.
Habitat fragmentation remains a major focus of research by ecologists decades after being put forward as a threat to the integrity of ecosystems. While studies have documented myriad biotic changes in fragmented landscapes, including the local extinction of species from fragments, the demographic mechanisms underlying these extinctions are rarely known. However, many of them-especially in lowland tropical forests-are thought to be driven by one of two mechanisms: (1) reduced recruitment in fragments resulting from changes in the diversity or abundance of pollinators and seed dispersers or (2) increased rates of individual mortality in fragments due to dramatically altered abiotic conditions, especially near fragment edges. Unfortunately, there have been few tests of these potential mechanisms due to the paucity of long-term and comprehensive demographic data collected in both forest fragments and continuous forest sites. Here we report 11 years (1998-2009) of demographic data from populations of the Amazonian understory herb Heliconia acuminata (LC Rich.) found at Brazil's Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project (BDFFP). The data set comprises >66,000 plant × year records of 8586 plants, including 3464 seedlings established after the first census. Seven populations were in experimentally isolated fragments (one in each of four 1-ha fragments and one in each of three 10-ha fragments), with the remaining six populations in continuous forest. Each population was in a 50 × 100 m permanent plot, with the distance between plots ranging from 500 m to 60 km. The plants in each plot were censused annually, at which time we recorded, identified, marked, and measured new seedlings, identified any previously marked plants that died, and recorded the size of surviving individuals. Each plot was also surveyed four to five times during the flowering season to identify reproductive plants and record the number of inflorescences each produced. These data have been used to investigate topics ranging from the way fragmentation-related reductions in germination influence population dynamics to statistical methods for analyzing reproductive rates. This breadth of prior use reflects the value of these data to future researchers. In addition to analyses of plant responses to habitat fragmentation, these data can be used to address fundamental questions in plant demography and the evolutionary ecology of tropical plants and to develop and test demographic models and tools. Though we welcome opportunities to collaborate with interested users, there are no restrictions on the use of this data set. However, we do request that those using the data for teaching or research purposes inform us of how they are doing so and cite this paper and the data archive when appropriate. Any publication using the data must also include a BDFFP Technical Series Number in the Acknowledgments. Authors can request this series number upon the acceptance of their article by contacting the BDFFP's Scientific Coordinator or E. M. Bruna.
生境破碎化仍是生态学研究的主要焦点,这一概念提出至今已有几十年,被认为对生态系统的完整性构成威胁。尽管研究已经记录了破碎景观中无数的生物变化,包括物种从碎片中的局部灭绝,但这些灭绝的人口机制却鲜为人知。然而,其中许多机制——尤其是在低地热带森林中——被认为是由以下两种机制之一驱动的:(1)由于传粉者和种子传播者的多样性或丰度的变化,导致碎片中的繁殖减少,或(2)由于生境条件的剧烈变化,尤其是在碎片边缘,碎片中个体死亡率的增加。不幸的是,由于在森林碎片和连续森林地点收集的长期和全面的人口数据很少,因此对这些潜在机制进行了很少的测试。在这里,我们报告了在巴西生物动力森林碎片项目(BDFFP)中发现的亚马逊林下草本植物 Heliconia acuminata(LC Rich.)的种群 11 年(1998-2009 年)的人口数据。该数据集包括在> 66000 株植物×年记录中发现的 8586 株植物,其中包括首次普查后建立的 3464 株幼苗。七个种群位于实验性隔离的碎片中(四个 1 公顷碎片中的一个和三个 10 公顷碎片中的一个),其余六个种群位于连续森林中。每个种群都在一个 50 × 100 米的永久样地中,样地之间的距离从 500 米到 60 公里不等。每年对每个样地中的植物进行一次普查,记录新的幼苗、确定任何先前标记的死亡植物,并记录存活个体的大小。每个样地在开花季节还会被调查四到五次,以确定繁殖植物并记录每个植物产生的花序数量。这些数据被用于研究从与碎片相关的发芽减少对种群动态的影响到分析繁殖率的统计方法等主题。这些数据之前的广泛使用反映了它们对未来研究人员的价值。除了分析植物对生境破碎化的反应外,这些数据还可用于解决热带植物种群动态和进化生态学的基本问题,并开发和测试人口模型和工具。尽管我们欢迎有兴趣的用户进行合作,但对本数据集的使用没有任何限制。但是,我们确实要求那些将数据用于教学或研究目的的用户告知我们他们的使用方式,并在适当情况下引用本论文和数据档案。任何使用这些数据的出版物也必须在致谢中包含一个 BDFFP 技术系列号。作者可以在他们的文章被接受后,通过联系 BDFFP 的科学协调员或 E. M. Bruna 来请求该系列号。