Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests

Ecosystem degradation leads to loss of interactions between animals and plants, and changes in frequency of pollination systems, dispersal modes and sexual systems of plants. The objective of the present work was to compare the reproductive ecological groups of tree species among semideciduous seaso...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Filipe Ferreira de Deus, Vagner Santiago do Vale, Ivan Schiavini, Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Uberlândia 2014-09-01
Series:Bioscience Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/biosciencejournal/article/view/23072
id doaj-3a71274c4ce247d1858a7b502c6479f6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3a71274c4ce247d1858a7b502c6479f62021-07-04T18:03:12ZengUniversidade Federal de UberlândiaBioscience Journal1981-31632014-09-0130623072Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forestsFilipe Ferreira de Deus0Vagner Santiago do ValeIvan SchiaviniPaulo Eugênio OliveiraUniversidade Federal de UberlândiaEcosystem degradation leads to loss of interactions between animals and plants, and changes in frequency of pollination systems, dispersal modes and sexual systems of plants. The objective of the present work was to compare the reproductive ecological groups of tree species among semideciduous seasonal forests remnants in the Triangulo Mineiro, Brazil, and to understand the organization of those plant communities. We analyzed the reproductive biology of 243 tree species found in 10 fragments, which showed different levels of disturbance. The occurrence and relative density of the species were used to estimate the importance of each reproductive feature. The study was based on a compilation of data present in specialized works and community surveys conducted in the region. We aggregated the species of these communities in ecological groups according to their reproductive characteristics. The frequency of species in each reproductive ecological group was, to a certain extent, similar between remnants. The pollination by small insects (small bees, wasps and flies) represented 42%, dispersal by birds 35%, and hermaphrodite sexual system 54% of the species. Clearer differences among fragments were found on the relative densities of each reproductive ecological group. Relatively specialized bat and moth pollination, as well as wind dispersal were common in the most disturbed fragment. But generalist reproductive characteristics predominated in the studied fragments.http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/biosciencejournal/article/view/23072pollination systemdispersal systemsexual systemforest fragments
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Filipe Ferreira de Deus
Vagner Santiago do Vale
Ivan Schiavini
Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
spellingShingle Filipe Ferreira de Deus
Vagner Santiago do Vale
Ivan Schiavini
Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
Bioscience Journal
pollination system
dispersal system
sexual system
forest fragments
author_facet Filipe Ferreira de Deus
Vagner Santiago do Vale
Ivan Schiavini
Paulo Eugênio Oliveira
author_sort Filipe Ferreira de Deus
title Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
title_short Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
title_full Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
title_fullStr Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
title_sort diversity of reproductive ecological groups in semideciduous seasonal forests
publisher Universidade Federal de Uberlândia
series Bioscience Journal
issn 1981-3163
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Ecosystem degradation leads to loss of interactions between animals and plants, and changes in frequency of pollination systems, dispersal modes and sexual systems of plants. The objective of the present work was to compare the reproductive ecological groups of tree species among semideciduous seasonal forests remnants in the Triangulo Mineiro, Brazil, and to understand the organization of those plant communities. We analyzed the reproductive biology of 243 tree species found in 10 fragments, which showed different levels of disturbance. The occurrence and relative density of the species were used to estimate the importance of each reproductive feature. The study was based on a compilation of data present in specialized works and community surveys conducted in the region. We aggregated the species of these communities in ecological groups according to their reproductive characteristics. The frequency of species in each reproductive ecological group was, to a certain extent, similar between remnants. The pollination by small insects (small bees, wasps and flies) represented 42%, dispersal by birds 35%, and hermaphrodite sexual system 54% of the species. Clearer differences among fragments were found on the relative densities of each reproductive ecological group. Relatively specialized bat and moth pollination, as well as wind dispersal were common in the most disturbed fragment. But generalist reproductive characteristics predominated in the studied fragments.
topic pollination system
dispersal system
sexual system
forest fragments
url http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/biosciencejournal/article/view/23072
work_keys_str_mv AT filipeferreiradedeus diversityofreproductiveecologicalgroupsinsemideciduousseasonalforests
AT vagnersantiagodovale diversityofreproductiveecologicalgroupsinsemideciduousseasonalforests
AT ivanschiavini diversityofreproductiveecologicalgroupsinsemideciduousseasonalforests
AT pauloeugeniooliveira diversityofreproductiveecologicalgroupsinsemideciduousseasonalforests
_version_ 1721319696493445120