Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Vincent Grégoire, Molino Jean-François, Marescot Lucile, Barkaoui Karim, Sabatier Daniel, Freycon V., Roelens J. B. (2011). The relative importance of dispersal limitation and habitat preference in shaping spatial distribution of saplings in a tropical moist forest : a case study along a combination of hydromorphic and canopy disturbance gradients. Annals of Forest Science, 68 (2), p. 357-370. ISSN 1286-4560.

Titre du document
The relative importance of dispersal limitation and habitat preference in shaping spatial distribution of saplings in a tropical moist forest : a case study along a combination of hydromorphic and canopy disturbance gradients
Année de publication
2011
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000290448000014
Auteurs
Vincent Grégoire, Molino Jean-François, Marescot Lucile, Barkaoui Karim, Sabatier Daniel, Freycon V., Roelens J. B.
Source
Annals of Forest Science, 2011, 68 (2), p. 357-370 ISSN 1286-4560
Various processes contribute to shaping the local assemblage of species in hyperdiverse tropical forest. The relative contribution of environmental factors and dispersal limitation in determining the spatial distribution of saplings at local scale is unclear. We examined two types of environmental factors: (a) soil type reflecting drainage regime and (b) past logging damages reflecting light regime in a neotropical moist forest site. We used a logistic model to predict presence or absence of a given species in a network of elementary small plots. The effect of mapped environmental factors and a spatial correlation term were jointly estimated providing a direct measure of the relative role of habitat specialisation and dispersal limitation. At community level, dispersal limitation was the most important determinant of species absence at local scale. The two environmental factors examined played a balanced role. Different species however showed different degrees of dispersal limitation and habitat specialisation. The distribution of a large proportion of species-the majority of the most abundant species-was significantly affected by at least one environmental factor. We provide a ranking of 49 species sensitive to canopy disturbance (from shade specialist to pioneer) and 41 species affected by seasonal flooding (either positively or negatively).
Plan de classement
Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010053546]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010053546
Contact