Vinícius de L. Dantas
Federal University of São Carlos
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vinícius de L. Dantas.
Ecology Letters | 2015
Andrew Siefert; Cyrille Violle; Loïc Chalmandrier; Cécile H. Albert; Adrien Taudiere; Alex Fajardo; Lonnie W. Aarssen; Christopher Baraloto; Marcos B. Carlucci; Marcus Vinicius Cianciaruso; Vinícius de L. Dantas; Francesco de Bello; Leandro da Silva Duarte; Carlos Fonseca; Grégoire T. Freschet; Stéphanie Gaucherand; Nicolas Gross; Kouki Hikosaka; Benjamin G. Jackson; Vincent Jung; Chiho Kamiyama; Masatoshi Katabuchi; Steven W. Kembel; Emilie Kichenin; Nathan J. B. Kraft; Anna Lagerström; Yoann Le Bagousse-Pinguet; Yuanzhi Li; Norman W. H. Mason; Julie Messier
Recent studies have shown that accounting for intraspecific trait variation (ITV) may better address major questions in community ecology. However, a general picture of the relative extent of ITV compared to interspecific trait variation in plant communities is still missing. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of the relative extent of ITV within and among plant communities worldwide, using a data set encompassing 629 communities (plots) and 36 functional traits. Overall, ITV accounted for 25% of the total trait variation within communities and 32% of the total trait variation among communities on average. The relative extent of ITV tended to be greater for whole-plant (e.g. plant height) vs. organ-level traits and for leaf chemical (e.g. leaf N and P concentration) vs. leaf morphological (e.g. leaf area and thickness) traits. The relative amount of ITV decreased with increasing species richness and spatial extent, but did not vary with plant growth form or climate. These results highlight global patterns in the relative importance of ITV in plant communities, providing practical guidelines for when researchers should include ITV in trait-based community and ecosystem studies.
Ecology | 2013
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Marco Antônio Batalha; Juli G. Pausas
In tropical landscapes, vegetation patches with contrasting tree densities are distributed as mosaics. However, the locations of patches and densities of trees within them cannot be predicted by climate models alone. It has been proposed that plant-fire feedbacks drive functional thresholds at a landscape scale, thereby maintaining open (savanna) and closed (forest) communities as two distinct stable states. However, there is little rigorous field evidence for this threshold model. Here we aim to provide support for such a model from a field perspective and to analyze the functional and phylogenetic consequences of fire in a Brazilian savanna landscape (Cerrado). We hypothesize that, in tropical landscapes, savanna and forest are two stable states maintained by plant-fire feedbacks. If so, their functional and diversity attributes should change abruptly along a community closure gradient. We set 98 plots along a gradient from open savanna to closed forest in the Brazilian Cerrado and tested for a threshold pattern in nine functional traits, five soil features, and seven diversity indicators. We then tested whether the threshold pattern was associated with different fire regimes. Most community attributes presented a threshold pattern on the savanna-forest transition with coinciding breakpoints. The thresholds separated two community states: (1) open environments with low-diversity communities growing in poor soils and dominated by plants that are highly resistant to high-intensity fires; and (2) closed environments with highly diverse plant communities growing in more fertile soils and dominated by shade-tolerant species that efficiently prevent light from reaching the understory. In addition, each state was associated with contrasting fire regimes. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that forests and savannas are two coexisting stable states with contrasting patterns of function and diversity that are regulated by fire-plant feedbacks; our results also shed light on the mechanism driving each state. Overall, our results support the idea that fire plays an important role in regulating the distribution of savanna and forest biomes in tropical landscapes.
Ecology Letters | 2016
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Marina Hirota; Rafael S. Oliveira; Juli G. Pausas
Understanding the mechanisms controlling the distribution of biomes remains a challenge. Although tropical biome distribution has traditionally been explained by climate and soil, contrasting vegetation types often occur as mosaics with sharp boundaries under very similar environmental conditions. While evidence suggests that these biomes are alternative states, empirical broad-scale support to this hypothesis is still lacking. Using community-level field data and a novel resource-niche overlap approach, we show that, for a wide range of environmental conditions, fire feedbacks maintain savannas and forests as alternative biome states in both the Neotropics and the Afrotropics. In addition, wooded grasslands and savannas occurred as alternative grassy states in the Afrotropics, depending on the relative importance of fire and herbivory feedbacks. These results are consistent with landscape scale evidence and suggest that disturbance is a general factor driving and maintaining alternative biome states and vegetation mosaics in the tropics.
Journal of Ecology | 2013
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Juli G. Pausas
The authors are grateful to the Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP; process: 2010/01835-0); the Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES; process: 1019-11-2); and the Spanish Government (VIRRA and TREVOL projects, CGL2009-12048/BOS and CGL2012-39938-C02-00) for financial support and the scholarships granted to the authors.
Journal of Ecology | 2018
Yuanzhi Li; Bill Shipley; Jodi N. Price; Vinícius de L. Dantas; Riin Tamme; Mark Westoby; Andrew Siefert; Brandon S. Schamp; Marko J. Spasojevic; Vincent Jung; Daniel C. Laughlin; Sarah J. Richardson; Yoann Le Bagousse-Pinguet; Christian Schöb; Antonio Gazol; Honor C. Prentice; Nicolas Gross; Jake Overton; Marcus Vinicius Cianciaruso; Frédérique Louault; Chiho Kamiyama; Tohru Nakashizuka; Kouki Hikosaka; Takehiro Sasaki; Masatoshi Katabuchi; Cédric Frenette Dussault; Stéphanie Gaucherand; Ning Chen; Marie Vandewalle; Marco Antônio Batalha
How the patterns of niche occupancy vary from species-poor to species-rich communities is a fundamental question in ecology that has a central bearing on the processes that drive patterns of biodiversity. As species richness increases, habitat filtering should constrain the expansion of total niche volume, while limiting similarity should restrict the degree of niche overlap between species. Here, by explicitly incorporating intraspecific trait variability, we investigate the relationship between functional niche occupancy and species richness at the global scale. 2.We assembled 21 datasets worldwide, spanning tropical to temperate biomes and consisting of 313 plant communities representing different growth forms. We quantified three key niche occupancy components (the total functional volume, the functional overlap between species and the average functional volume per species) for each community, related each component to species richness, and compared each component to the null expectations. 3.As species richness increased, communities were more functionally diverse (an increase in total functional volume), and species overlapped more within the community (an increase in functional overlap) but did not more finely divide the functional space (no decline in average functional volume). Null model analyses provided evidence for habitat filtering (smaller total functional volume than expectation), but not for limiting similarity (larger functional overlap and larger average functional volume than expectation) as a process driving the pattern of functional niche occupancy. 4.Synthesis. Habitat filtering is a widespread process driving the pattern of functional niche occupancy across plant communities and coexisting species tend to be more functionally similar rather than more functionally specialized. Our results indicate that including intraspecific trait variability will contribute to a better understanding of the processes driving patterns of functional niche occupancy
Flora | 2011
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Marco Antônio Batalha
Oecologia | 2013
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Juli G. Pausas; Marco Antônio Batalha; Priscilla P. Loiola; Marcus Vinicius Cianciaruso
Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2017
Juli G. Pausas; Vinícius de L. Dantas
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2015
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Marco Antônio Batalha; Helena França; Juli G. Pausas
Botany | 2012
Vinícius de L. Dantas; Marco Antônio Batalha