Tesis
Eficiência de reflorestamentos nativos e exóticos na recuperação de interações formiga-planta em uma paisagem agroflorestal na Amazônia Meridional
Fecha
2012-12-18Registro en:
FALCÃO, Jéssica Caroline de Faria. Eficiência de reflorestamentos nativos e exóticos na recuperação de interações formiga-planta em uma paisagem agroflorestal na Amazônia Meridional. 2012. 52 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ecologia e Conservação da Biodiversidade) - Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso, Instituto de Biociências, Cuiabá, 2012.
Autor
Izzo, Thiago Junqueira
http://lattes.cnpq.br/7106236848048146
Izzo, Thiago Junqueira
276.712.688-44
http://lattes.cnpq.br/7106236848048146
Rodrigues, Domingos de Jesus
622.614.011-91
http://lattes.cnpq.br/4976774110891866
276.712.688-44
Souza, Thiago Gonçalves
105.031.397-69
http://lattes.cnpq.br/0444294877812617
Mateus, Lucia Aparecida de Fátima
544.259.641-87
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5434630030379616
Institución
Resumen
Recently, various reforestation programs have been created in the Brazilian Amazon in order to restoring the
biological diversity in deforested environments. However, most studies have focused only on species loss
and ignored the loss of ecological interactions and ecosystem services involving these species in their natural
environment. In this study, we used metrics derived from ecological networks to evaluate the role of
reforestation, natural regenerationand the distance of the forest matrix, on the mutualistic interactions
between ants and plants with extrafloral nectaries (EFN) in a rainforest within the southern Brazilian
Amazon. We showed that the distance of the forest did not influence the restoration of ant-plant networks.
Moreover, we also showed that reforestations of the exotic and native species (Tectona grandis and Ficus
maxima) and environments of natural regeneration had the same efficiency in recovering the diversity of antplant interactions in relation to pasture. We also found no difference in the specificity of ant-plant
interactions between the reforestation of T. grandis, environments of natural regeneration and the forest.
Reforestation of F. Maxima had the same specificity of interactions that pasture. Additionally, the nestedness
value of networks also did not vary among the environments studied, which indicate that the topological
structure of ant-plant networks can be stable independently of local environmental factors. In short, we
showed that the natural regeneration may be the more efficient and economical method to restoring the
diversity and structure of ant-plants with EFN interactions in tropical forests.