Functional diversity influence in forest wood stock: a study of the brazilian savanna
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14393/BJ-v32n1a2016-33189Palavras-chave:
Cerrado. Functional traits, Ecosystem services, Functional EcologyResumo
Research regarding biodiversity and ecosystem services has been demonstrating a positive correlation among the ecosystem processes, such as the carbon sink into plant biomass and the quantity of carbon in natural vegetation. Nonetheless, it is hard to understand the biodiversity measurements, because they involve gene, phenotypic, population, species, community and ecosystem diversity. The functional diversity refers to the species richness and variety, their characteristics and how that affects the functioning of an ecosystem. Primary productivity is a key factor that affects the functioning of a forest ecosystem. Thus, the aim of this paper was to evaluate the influence of functional diversity on the woody volume productivity (as a proxy for primary production) in the Brazilian savanna. We used six functional characteristics, and to verify the relation between forest production and functional diversity facets, we tested many models. Regarding wood volume, the best models were the exponential and logarithmic. None of the linear models showed significant regression parameters as there was no additive relationship among the multifaceted aspects of functional diversity and wood volume. We found a positive correlation between the functional diversity and primary productivity, which can be used to forecast the effects of diversity variation on ecosystem services.
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Copyright (c) 2016 Milton Serpa de Meira-Junior, José Imaña-Encinas, José Roberto Rodrigues Pinto, Sílvia da Luz Lima Mota
Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.