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Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns in species richness and distribution of vascular epiphytes in Chiapas, Mexico

Jan H. D. Wolf, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2003 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 11, pp 1689-1707
TLDR
Assessment of regional patterns in the distribution and species richness of vascular epiphytes with an emphasis on forests that differ in altitude and the amount of rainfall in Chiapas confirmed the presumed presence of a belt of high diversity at mid-elevations in neotropical mountains.
Abstract
Aim We aim to assess regional patterns in the distribution and species richness of vascular epiphytes with an emphasis on forests that differ in altitude and the amount of rainfall. Location Tropical America, in particularly the 75000 km2 large state of Chiapas in southern Mexico at 14.5-18.0o N. Chiapas is diverse in habitats with forests from sea-level to the tree-line at approximately 3800 m altitude and with annual amounts of rainfall ranging from 800 to over 5000 mm. It is also one of the botanical best-explored regions in the tropics. Methods First we give an overview of epiphyte inventories to date. Such epiphyte surveys were mostly carried out on the basis of surface area or individual trees and we discuss their problematic comparison. Applying a different methodological approach, next we used 12276 unique vascular epiphyte plant collections from Chiapas that are deposited in various botanical collections. The locality data were georeferenced and compiled in a relational database that was analysed using a Geographic Information System. To compare the number of species between inventories that differed in the numbers of records, we estimated the total richness, SChao, at each. Results We recorded 1173 vascular epiphyte species in 39 families (23 angiosperms), comprising c. 14% of all confirmed plant species in the state. About half of all species were orchids (568). Ferns and bromeliads were the next species rich groups with 244 and 101 species, respectively. Most species were found in the Montane Rain Forest and in the Central Plateau. Trees of different forest formations, rainfall regimes, altitudes and physiographic regions supported a characteristic epiphyte flora. Main conclusions We were able to confirm the presumed presence of a belt of high diversity at mid-elevations (500 - 2000 m) in neotropical mountains. In contrast to predictions, however, we observed a decrease in diversity when the annual amount of rainfall exceeded 2500 mm. The decrease is attributed to wind-dispersed orchids, bromeliads and Pteridophyta that may find establishment problematical under frequent downpours. In the wet but seasonal forests in Chiapas, this decrease is not compensated by plants in the animal-dispersed Araceae that are abundant elsewhere. We presume that in addition to the annual amount of rainfall, its distribution in time determines the composition of the epiphyte community.

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Citations
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Vascular epiphyte distribution patterns: explaining the mid-elevation richness peak

TL;DR: The finding that different groups and life forms varied in the elevation at which species richness peaked, highlights the need to conserve the few remaining intact elevational gradients in Latin America.
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Diversity patterns of vascular epiphytes along an elevational gradient in the Andes

TL;DR: The study confirms the hump-shaped elevational pattern of vascular epiphyte richness, but the causes of this are still poorly understood and suggest that some taxa have a phylogenetically determined propensity for survival under extreme conditions (low temperatures, low humidity, and low light levels in the forest interior).
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Epiphytism and pollinator specialization: drivers for orchid diversity?

TL;DR: Whether orchids managed to radiate so explosively owing to their predominantly epiphytic habit and/or their specialized pollinator systems is investigated by testing these hypotheses from a statistical and phylogenetic standpoint and Repeated associations between a small body size, short life cycle and specialized clinging roots of twigEpiphytes in Bulbophyllinae and Oncidiinae were discovered.
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Clearance and fragmentation of tropical montane forests in the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico (1975-2000)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the rate of loss and patterns of fragmentation in tropical montane forests in the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico, during a 25-year period.
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