Microclimatic variations in tropical canopies: a glimpse into the
processes of community assembly in epiphytic bryophyte communities
- Ting Shen,
- Richard Corlett,
- Flavien Collart,
- Thibault Kasprzyk,
- Xin-Lei Guo,
- Jairo Patiño,
- Yang Su,
- Olivier Hardy,
- Wen-Zhang Ma,
- Jian Wang,
- Yu-Mei Wei,
- Léa Mouton,
- Yuan Li,
- Liang Song,
- Alain Vanderpoorten
Ting Shen
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Corresponding Author:ting.shen@doct.uliege.be
Author ProfileRichard Corlett
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileXin-Lei Guo
Aba Academy of Ecological Protection and Development
Author ProfileJairo Patiño
Instituto de Productos Naturales & Agrobiología (IPNA) – Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
Author ProfileWen-Zhang Ma
Kunming Institute of Botany Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileYu-Mei Wei
Guangxi Institute of Botany, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileLiang Song
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Author ProfileAbstract
Epiphytic communities live in a unique, three-dimensional micro-habitat
space that offers an original framework to disentangle the contribution
of environmental filters, biotic interactions and dispersal limitation
to community structure at small spatial scales. We took advantage of a
tropical canopy crane facility to record and model spatio-temporal
microclimatic variation and assess its impact on the composition and
phylogenetic structure of epiphytic bryophyte communities. Generalized
Dissimilarity Modelling evidenced the crucial role of microclimates in
determining the composition of moss and liverwort communities. The shift
between negative or non-significant phylogenetic turnover to
consistently significant clustering from the base to the canopy suggests
that phylogenetic constraints further contribute to shape the assembly
of epiphytic bryophyte communities. The slight, but significant
correlation between increasing phylogenetic clustering with variation in
microclimatic conditions adds to emerging evidence for the role of
environmental filtering upon community assembly, including at the small
spatial scales of epiphytic communities.