artículo científico
Comparative analysis on datasets of myxomycetes associated with boreal, temperate and tropical regions of North America
Fecha
2020-10Autor
Rojas Alvarado, Carlos Alonso
Stephenson, Steven L.
Institución
Resumen
Datasets from boreal (Denali National Park, United
States), temperate (Great Smoky Mountains National Park, United States) and tropical (La Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica) regions of North America
were subjected to analysis. The complete dataset,
composed primarily of field data, consisted of 3558
records, with 46% temperate, 29% boreal and 23%
tropical. A total of 208 species were recorded for the
three regions, with 69% temperate, 49% boreal and
40% tropical. A high significant correlation between
the number of records and the number of species
(r2=0.99, P=0.001) suggested that the latter was a
function of the former, independent of location.
However, this relationship was stable at low survey
efforts, as it was observed in a model obtained with
25 independent datasets from the northern hemisphere of the Americas. Diversity values, calculated
with the Shannon Index, ranged from 3.4 to 4.0 and
were different for all pairwise combinations (all cases P<0.05) of the three datasets, but when calculated with the Simpson Index they were not different
for the combination of temperate and boreal datasets. At the species level, the smallest value (0.38)
for coefficient of community was observed for the
boreal-tropical pair and highest (0.56) for the temperate-tropical pair. The taxonomic diversity indices
were 2.68 and 2.83 for the boreal and tropical datasets, but 3.76 for the temperate dataset. The latter
may be an indication of higher fruiting propensity
in temperate regions rather than an indication of
intraspecific diversity, an idea that deserves further
examination. The boreal dataset had the highest
number of unique genera (7), followed by the temperate (6) and the tropical (2) datasets. However,
the temperate dataset showed the highest number
of unique species (57), followed by the boreal (37)
and tropical (26) datasets. When analyzed in a comparative context, standard experiments with similar
field efforts and techniques are still required to document patterns of reproductive occurrence of myxomycetes in different regions of the world. For macroecological purposes, all regions represented by the
datasets analyzed herein still remain understudied.