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Abstract
Fire plays a key role in grasslands, determining the distribution and evolution of species and boundaries with neighboring ecosystems. Evidence of community-wide responses to fire is largely based on taxonomic and functional descriptors, while the phylogenetic dimension is overlooked. Here we evaluated how the taxonomic and phylogenetic structure of grassland plant communities responded to a time since fire (TSF) gradient. We sampled 12 communities in Southern Brazil under varying TSF and calculated taxonomic species richness (S) and dominance (D), phylogenetic diversity (PD), and mean phylogenetic distances (MPD). We used Structural Equation Models to test the relationships between the environmental gradient and community descriptors. Communities with longer TSF presented higher PD and MPD but lower species richness and increased taxonomic dominance. These sites were dominated by monocots, specifically C4 grasses, but also presented exclusive clades, whereas recently-burned sites presented lower taxonomic dominance and more species distributed in a wider variety of clades. Our results indicate that these scenarios are interchangeable and dependent on fire management. Fire adaptation was not constrained by phylogenetic relatedness, contrasting with previous findings for tropical savannahs and indicating that temperate and tropical non-forest ecosystems from South America respond differently to fire, possibly due to different evolutionary histories.
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Details
1 Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, PUCRS, Laboratório de Ecologia de Interações, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia e Evolução da Biodiversidade, Porto Alegre, Brazil (GRID:grid.412519.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2166 9094)
2 Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Departamento de Biologia, Santa Maria, Brazil (GRID:grid.411239.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2284 6531)
3 Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Laboratório de Ecologia Funcional e Filogenética (LEFF), Porto Alegre, Brazil (GRID:grid.8532.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2200 7498)