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      Functional diversity and conservation of Phellodendron amurense communities in the Dongling Mountain of Beijing, China Translated title: Diversidad functional y conservación de las comunidades de Phellodendron amurense en la montaña Dongling de Beijing, China

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          Abstract

          Functional diversity is important to ecological processes and íunctioning oí plant communities. The interaction oí functional diversity with environmental variables in Phellodendron amurense (an endangered species) communities in the Dongling Mountain was analyzed. Twenty-five 10 m x 20 m-plots were established in P. amurense communities and species composition, traits and environmental variables were measured and recorded. A new index based on Self-Organized Feature Map theory (SOFM index) for measuring functional diversity was introduced, and other six common indices were used in the analysis of functional diversity. The results showed that Self-Organized Feature Map index was an effective method in functional diversity studies. Functional diversity in P. amurense communities varied greatly; functional diversity increased linearly with elevation; it was negatively correlated with aspect, litter and slope position, and positively correlated with species richness. Functional diversity showed significant, negative effects on the importance values of P. amurense, which suggested that functional diversity should be maintained in a suitable extent for conservation purpose.

          Translated abstract

          La diversidad funcional es importante para los procesos ecológicos y el funcionamiento de las comunidades vegetales. Se analizó la interacción de la diversidad funcional con las variables ambientales en comunidades de Phellodendron amurense, una especie en peligro de extinción, de la montaña Dongling en China. Se establecieron 25 parcelas de 10 m x 20 m en las comunidades de P. amurense, se midieron y registraron la composición de especies, los rasgos y las variables ambientales. Se empleó un nuevo índice basado en la teoría del mapa de características autorganizadas, así como otros seis índices generalmente usados en el análisis de la diversidad funcional. Los resultados mostraron que el índice del mapa de características autorganizadas fue un método eficaz en estudios de diversidad funcional. La diversidad funcional en comunidades de P. amurense resultó muy variable, se incrementó linealmente con la altitud y se correlacionó negativamente con el aspecto, el mantillo y la posición de la pendiente, pero positivamente con la riqueza de especies. La diversidad funcional mostró efectos negativos para los valores de importancia de P. amurense, lo que sugiere que la diversidad funcional se debe mantener en un nivel adecuado con propósitos de conservación.

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          New multidimensional functional diversity indices for a multifaceted framework in functional ecology.

          Functional diversity is increasingly identified as an important driver of ecosystem functioning. Various indices have been proposed to measure the functional diversity of a community, but there is still no consensus on which are most suitable. Indeed, none of the existing indices meets all the criteria required for general use. The main criteria are that they must be designed to deal with several traits, take into account abundances, and measure all the facets of functional diversity. Here we propose three indices to quantify each facet of functional diversity for a community with species distributed in a multidimensional functional space: functional richness (volume of the functional space occupied by the community), functional evenness (regularity of the distribution of abundance in this volume), and functional divergence (divergence in the distribution of abundance in this volume). Functional richness is estimated using the existing convex hull volume index. The new functional evenness index is based on the minimum spanning tree which links all the species in the multidimensional functional space. Then this new index quantifies the regularity with which species abundances are distributed along the spanning tree. Functional divergence is measured using a novel index which quantifies how species diverge in their distances (weighted by their abundance) from the center of gravity in the functional space. We show that none of the indices meets all the criteria required for a functional diversity index, but instead we show that the set of three complementary indices meets these criteria. Through simulations of artificial data sets, we demonstrate that functional divergence and functional evenness are independent of species richness and that the three functional diversity indices are independent of each other. Overall, our study suggests that decomposition of functional diversity into its three primary components provides a meaningful framework for its quantification and for the classification of existing functional diversity indices. This decomposition has the potential to shed light on the role of biodiversity on ecosystem functioning and on the influence of biotic and abiotic filters on the structure of species communities. Finally, we propose a general framework for applying these three functional diversity indices.
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            A distance-based framework for measuring functional diversity from multiple traits

            A new framework for measuring functional diversity (FD) from multiple traits has recently been proposed. This framework was mostly limited to quantitative traits without missing values and to situations in which there are more species than traits, although the authors had suggested a way to extend their framework to other trait types. The main purpose of this note is to further develop this suggestion. We describe a highly flexible distance-based framework to measure different facets of FD in multidimensional trait space from any distance or dissimilarity measure, any number of traits, and from different trait types (i.e., quantitative, semi-quantitative, and qualitative). This new approach allows for missing trait values and the weighting of individual traits. We also present a new multidimensional FD index, called functional dispersion (FDis), which is closely related to Rao's quadratic entropy. FDis is the multivariate analogue of the weighted mean absolute deviation (MAD), in which the weights are species relative abundances. For unweighted presence-absence data, FDis can be used for a formal statistical test of differences in FD. We provide the "FD" R language package to easily implement our distance-based FD framework.
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              Functional diversity: back to basics and looking forward.

              Functional diversity is a component of biodiversity that generally concerns the range of things that organisms do in communities and ecosystems. Here, we review how functional diversity can explain and predict the impact of organisms on ecosystems and thereby provide a mechanistic link between the two. Critical points in developing predictive measures of functional diversity are the choice of functional traits with which organisms are distinguished, how the diversity of that trait information is summarized into a measure of functional diversity, and that the measures of functional diversity are validated through quantitative analyses and experimental tests. There is a vast amount of trait information available for plant species and a substantial amount for animals. Choosing which traits to include in a particular measure of functional diversity will depend on the specific aims of a particular study. Quantitative methods for choosing traits and for assigning weighting to traits are being developed, but need much more work before we can be confident about trait choice. The number of ways of measuring functional diversity is growing rapidly. We divide them into four main groups. The first, the number of functional groups or types, has significant problems and researchers are more frequently using measures that do not require species to be grouped. Of these, some measure diversity by summarizing distances between species in trait space, some by estimating the size of the dendrogram required to describe the difference, and some include information about species' abundances. We show some new and important differences between these, as well as what they indicate about the responses of assemblages to loss of individuals. There is good experimental and analytical evidence that functional diversity can provide a link between organisms and ecosystems but greater validation of measures is required. We suggest that non-significant results have a range of alternate explanations that do not necessarily contradict positive effects of functional diversity. Finally, we suggest areas for development of techniques used to measure functional diversity, highlight some exciting questions that are being addressed using ideas about functional diversity, and suggest some directions for novel research.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                bs
                Botanical Sciences
                Bot. sci
                Sociedad Botánica de México A.C. (México, Ciudad de México, Mexico )
                2007-4298
                2007-4476
                2013
                : 91
                : 4
                : 505-513
                Affiliations
                [01] Beijing orgnameBeijing Normal University orgdiv1College of Life Sciences China
                [02] Taiyuan orgnameShanxi University orgdiv1Institute of Loess Plateau China
                [04] orgnameBeijing Normal University orgdiv1College of Life Sciences
                [03] Zhenjiang orgnameJiangsu University of Science and Technology orgdiv1School of Biology and Chemical Engineering China
                Article
                S2007-42982013000400009 S2007-4298(13)09100400009
                97871082-bbaf-44dd-a0f0-d76816e73039

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 25 April 2013
                : 02 December 2012
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 35, Pages: 9
                Product

                SciELO Mexico

                Categories
                Ecology

                Ecology
                características funcionales,conservación,distancia funcional,diversidad de especies,diversidad funcional,variables ambientales,conservation,environmental variable,functional distance,functional diversity,species diversity,functional traits

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