info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Dispersal of forest birds and trees along the Uruguay River in southern South America
Fecha
2005-05Registro en:
Nores, Manuel Alberto; Cerana, María Micaela; Monserrat, Diego Andrés; Dispersal of forest birds and trees along the Uruguay River in southern South America; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Diversity and Distributions; 11; 3; 5-2005; 205-217
1366-9516
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Nores, Manuel Alberto
Cerana, María Micaela
Monserrat, Diego Andrés
Resumen
The Uruguay River starts in Serra do Mar in Brazil, runs through the Paranense forest, and flows southward through grassland and savannas. It has a continuous gallery forest of 750 km from the southern border of the Paranense forest to the river mouth. The gallery forest extends for 100 km more along the Río de la Plata. 125 (68.7%) of the 182 species of forest birds recorded in the southern Paranense forest penetrate into the gallery forest of the Uruguay River and only 13 (7.1%) reach the end of the gallery forest (Punta Lara). The number of bird species is inversely correlated (r2 = 0.942) with distance and the slope of the regression is 58.10. This means a decline in diversity with 32% of species lost per unit distance. A hundred and eighty forest tree species were recorded in the southern Paranense forest, of which 113 (62.8%) penetrate into the gallery forest of the Uruguay River, and 28 (15.6%) reach Punta Lara. The number of tree species is inversely correlated (r2 = 0.976) with distance and the slope of the regression is -45.62. This means a decline in diversity with 25% of species lost per unit distance. The Uruguay River enables the dispersal of many species of forest birds and trees from the rain forest, but species richness tends to decrease with increased distance from the source area. A clear association pattern was found for birds between size, diet, habitat use and distance reached into the gallery forest. Species of smaller body size, granivores, insectivores and those that use both the interior and exterior parts of the gallery forest advanced noticeably further along the river than larger species, carnivores, nectarivores or frugivores, and those that frequent only a part of the forest. Similarly, a clear association between dispersal mechanism, water dependence and distance reached into the gallery forest was found for trees. Species with vegetative reproduction, zoochorous species and riparian species advanced markedly longer distances along the river than, anemochorous species and non-riparian species.