Tese
The role of soils in phenology and herbivory in a tropical grassland–Savanna–forest gradient
Fecha
2021-11-27Autor
Carolina Santos de Oliveira
Institución
Resumen
The evolutionary responses of plants vary according to the soil availability resources, which is
one of the main factors responsible for species communities’ composition. In old, climatically
buffered, infertile landscapes (OCBILs), such as campo rupestre, functional traits specialized
in resources acquisition and conservation are expected. However, these adaptations are
associated with less investment in growth and reproduction. Interspersed with campos
rupestres, two main vegetations occur under relatively more fertile soils: cerrado stricto sensu
(cerrado) and forest fragments. This vegetation diversity under the same climatic regime creates
an environmental gradient towards campo rupestre < cerrado < forest, which is a true natural
laboratory to investigate the edaphic resources influence on plant ecology. At this gradient, we
surveyed vegetative and reproductive phenological strategies of 70 plant species from the three
vegetation types over a year. Cerrado and forest communities had similar phenological
strategies, while the campo rupestre species presented strategies that maximize resources
acquisition and conservation, such as the exploitation of the rain pulses for a continuous leaf
flushing. We also investigated herbivory levels variation of plant communities in the three
vegetation types. We collected 22.250 leaves from 74 species and analyzed leaf functional
characteristics related to growth investment (leaf area – FA) and defenses (specific leaf area –
SLA) of plants, as well as the percentage of leaf area removed (%LAR). We found increasing
AF and SLA values and positively related to %AFR along the gradient. We also observed that
trees (fast growing life form) had mean values of SLA, FA and %LAR higher than shrubs (slow
growth). Our results bring new empirical data that point to the scarcity of edaphic resources as
an environmental filter capable of selecting phenological and morphophysiological functional
traits that promote, respectively, resources acquisition in seasonally dry environments, and
resources conservation by decreasing herbivory levels