Artículos de revistas
Wood-decaying polypores in the mountains of central Argentina in relation to Polylepis forest structure and altitude
Fecha
2010-08Registro en:
Robledo, Gerardo Lucio; Renison, Daniel; Wood-decaying polypores in the mountains of central Argentina in relation to Polylepis forest structure and altitude; Elsevier; Fungal Ecology; 3; 3; 8-2010; 178-184
1754-5048
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Robledo, Gerardo Lucio
Renison, Daniel
Resumen
To determine how altitude and forest successional stage are related to richness and composition of wood-decaying polypore fungi in Polylepis mountain forests of central Argentina we sampled 48 forest plots of 900 m2 which included a range of successional stages and altitudes. We recorded a total of 19 species and our main results show that overall richness increased with forest successional stage and altitude, while endemic species richness was positively related only to altitude. Polypore community structure as exemplified by DCA Axes 1 and 2 was also related only to altitude with no pattern with forest successional stage, meaning polypore species are added during succession with no loss of early successional species. We conclude these forests must be managed to promote more mature forests and emphasis must be placed on a range of altitudes, especially highland areas where slow decomposition allows for a more diverse polypore community.