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Savanna-Forest Coexistence Across a Fire Gradient

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Author(s):
Bernardino, Paulo N. ; Dantas, Vinicius L. ; Hirota, Marina ; Pausas, Juli G. ; Oliveira, Rafael S.
Total Authors: 5
Document type: Journal article
Source: ECOSYSTEMS; v. 25, n. 2, p. 12-pg., 2021-06-07.
Abstract

Tropical forests and savannas can co-occur in a range of macro-environmental conditions. In these conditions, disturbances and resource availability are thought to control savanna and forest transitions, although the mechanisms involved are disputed. We hypothesized that, in Neotropical regions where fire activity is high, fire is the main factor controlling functional differences between savanna and forest, as well as their relative resistance to biome shifts. We sampled plant functional traits and soil and determined fire history, for 198 plots distributed across three landscapes with distinct fire frequencies (high, mid, and low). In each landscape, plots covered a woody cover gradient (from wooded grasslands to forests). We tested whether the sharpness and the magnitude of the functional distinction between savanna and forest were affected by fire. We also computed the environmental hyperspace (niche space) to evaluate how biome relative stability changed in relation to fire. Functional thresholds were detected only in the high and mid landscapes, where savanna and forest plots formed a multidimensional bimodal distribution in functional trait space. The stability of savannas in relation to forest increased abruptly with fire, whereas functional differences between forest and savanna increased gradually. Our results suggest that savanna can occur as an alternative vegetation state to forest where a fire burns every 18 years (on average), but higher frequencies are required for savannas to occupy large unique portions of the environmental niche space. [GRAPHICS] . (AU)

FAPESP's process: 13/50169-1 - Towards an understanding of tipping points within tropical South American biomes
Grantee:Ricardo da Silva Torres
Support Opportunities: Research Grants - Research Partnership for Technological Innovation - PITE
FAPESP's process: 14/06453-0 - Towards an understanding of tipping points within tropical South American biomes
Grantee:Vinicius de Lima Dantas
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral
FAPESP's process: 19/07773-1 - Restoring neo-tropical dry ecosystems - is plant functional composition the key to success?
Grantee:Rafael Silva Oliveira
Support Opportunities: Research Projects - Thematic Grants
FAPESP's process: 14/06100-0 - Ecological processes driving biome boundary transitions in a multi- scale perspective
Grantee:Paulo Negri Bernardino
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Master