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Floristic and phytosociology in a physiognomic gradient of riverine forest in Cerrado, Campinas, SP

Florística e fitossociologia em um gradiente fisionômico de floresta ribeirinha em Cerrado, Campinas, SP

Abstracts

Knowledge on floristic composition and vegetation structure is essential to preserve plant biodiversity and environmental conditions. A floristic and structural survey of woody vegetation was carried out in a physiognomic gradient of riparian forest of Cerrado vegetation, Campinas - SP. We sampled 25 plots, distributed along five transects, located perpendicularly to a stream. We found 971 individuals (65 standing dead trees) distributed among 35 families and 80 species. We recorded one single individual of exotic species (Citrus limon – rangpur) and a large number of individuals of endangered species (Luetzelburgia guaissara, Myroxylon peruiferum andTrichilia hirta) indicating that the Santa Elisa study area retains much of the original characteristics of its native vegetation. The small number of exclusive Cerrado species in the study area indicates that riverine environments represent a very different condition in relation to that of the Cerrado. Except for swampy areas, which are more homogeneous and floristically similar to each other due to adaptations to greater environmental constraints, the riverine forest physiognomies showed greater internal floristic heterogeneity, even considering only those located in Cerrado areas. This emphasizes the importance of studying riverine forests flora for each particular region, especially when restoration or management actions are needed. At the Santa Elisa riverine-cerrado transition fragment, riparian species were found throughout gradient up to the limit of the study area showing that a distance of at least 50 m far from the stream should be preserved in order to keep the riparian environment.

ecotone; savanna; floristic similarity; riverine forest-cerrado transition; vegetation structure


Conhecer a composição florística e a estrutura da vegetação é imprescindível quando se trata da conservação da biodiversidade e das condições ambientais. Foi realizado um levantamento florístico e estrutural da vegetação arbórea em um gradiente fisionômico de mata ribeirinha em área de Cerrado, Campinas - SP, em 25 parcelas, distribuídas em cinco transectos, localizados perpendicularmente a um córrego. Foram encontrados 971 indivíduos (65 mortos em pé), pertencentes a 35 famílias e 80 espécies, sendo um único indivíduo de espécie exótica (Citrus limon – limão-vinagre) e um número muito maior de indivíduos de espécies ameaçadas (Luetzelburgia guaissara, Myroxylon peruiferum eTrichilia hirta) indicando que a área de estudo na Fazenda Santa Elisa mantém muito das características originais de sua vegetação nativa. O pequeno número de espécies exclusivas do Cerrado na área de estudo indica que ambientes ribeirinhos representam uma condição muito diferente em relação àquelas do Cerrado. Com exceção de áreas paludícolas, que são mais homogêneas e floristicamente semelhantes devido à adaptação a maiores restrições ambientais, as fisionomias florestais ribeirinhas comparadas mostraram grande heterogeneidade florística, mesmo considerando-se apenas aquelas localizadas em áreas de Cerrado. Isso enfatiza a importância de se estudar a flora das florestas ribeirinhas de cada região em particular, especialmente quando as ações de restauração ou de gestão são necessárias. No fragmento de transição floresta ribeirinha-cerrado da Fazenda Santa Elisa, as espécies exclusivas de florestas ribeirinhas, embora com diferentes densidades, foram encontradas em todo o gradiente até o limite da área de estudo, mostrando que a vegetação deve ser preservada até uma distância de pelo menos 50 m a partir do rio, a fim de manter o ambiente ribeirinho.

ecótono; savana; similaridade florísitca; transição floresta ribeirinha-cerrado; estrutura da vegetação


Introduction

The Brazilian savanna, hereafter called cerrado (usual designation in Brazil) has a very wide distribution. From its core region in Central Brazil (Mantovani & Martins 1993MANTOVANI, W. & MARTINS, F.R. 1993. Florística do cerrado na Reserva Biológica de Moji Guaçu, SP. Acta Bot. Bras. 7(1):33-60.) it extends continuously throughout the states of Goiás, Tocantins, Minas Gerais, Distrito Federal, Bahia, Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Piauí, Maranhão, Rondônia and São Paulo, also occurring in disjoint areas in the states of Amapá, Amazonas, Pará, Ceará, Paraná and Roraima (Ribeiro & Walter 1998RIBEIRO, J.F. & WALTER, B.M.T. 1998. As principais fitofisionomias do bioma Cerrado. In Cerrado: Ambiente e Flora (S.M. Sano & S.P. Almeida, eds.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Planaltina, v.1, p.152-212.). Because of its distribution in areas with different environmental conditions, the Cerrado is found as a mosaic of vegetation types, from grassland vegetation with greater presence of shrubs and grasses (such as scrub savanna – “campo cerrado” - and grassland savanna – “campo sujo” and “campo limpo”), throughout an intermediate vegetation (such as savanna sensu stricto – “cerradosensu stricto”), and then to a forest vegetation (forested savanna – “cerradão”) with continuous canopy (Coutinho 2002COUTINHO, L.M. 2002. O bioma do cerrado. In Eugen Warming e o cerrado brasileiro: um século depois (A.L. Klein, org.). Editora UNESP, Imprensa Oficial do Estado, São Paulo, p.77-91.) that, according to Rizzini (1997)RIZZINI, C.T. 1997. Tratado de fitogeografia do Brasil: aspectos ecológicos, sociológicos e florísticos. Âmbito Cultural Edições Ltda., São Paulo., was originally associated with rainforests.

Due to the central position of the Cerrado in Brazil and its marginal areas of occurrence, it is associated with other physiognomic domains such as the Amazon and Atlantic Forests as part of the “diagonal of open formations”, that also includes Chaco and Caatinga (Oliveira-Filho & Fontes 2000OLIVEIRA-FILHO, A.T. & FONTES, M.A.L. 2000. Patterns of floristic differentiation among Atlantic Forests in southeasthern Brazil and the influence of climate. Biotropica 32(4b):738-810. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7429.2000.tb00619.x
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7429.20...
). The Amazon and the Atlantic Forests have intrusions into the Cerrado represented by alluvial or riverine forests (Oliveira-Filho & Ratter 1995OLIVEIRA-FILHO, A.T. & RATTER, J.A. 1995. A study of the origin of central Brazilian forests by the analysis of plant species distribution patterns. Edinb. J. Bot. 52:141-194. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0960428600000949
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), which can be considered a transition area.

There are several terms to characterize the forests on the margin of rivers and other water bodies. Rodrigues (2000)RODRIGUES, R.R. 2000. Florestas ciliares? Uma discussão nomenclatural das formações ciliares. In Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.91-100. distinguishes them as swampy forests (where the soil is permanently waterlogged and there is constant flow of surface water in channels), gallery forests (inserted in areas with non-forest interfluve vegetation and along small rivers, forming the galleries), riparian forests (inserted in areas where interfluve vegetation is forested) and riverine forests (very generic term, can be used to designate the vegetation occurring on the edge of marginal levees, differing from gallery forests by not forming corridors of vegetation).

Considering only the Cerrado domain, Ribeiro & Walter (1998)RIBEIRO, J.F. & WALTER, B.M.T. 1998. As principais fitofisionomias do bioma Cerrado. In Cerrado: Ambiente e Flora (S.M. Sano & S.P. Almeida, eds.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Planaltina, v.1, p.152-212. recognize riverine forests, such as those surrounded by dry forests (matas secas) or “cerradão” – forest physiognomies floristically different from riverine forests –, and gallery forests, where the interfluve vegetation is not forest, with abrupt transition to savannic and grassland formations. According to Coutinho (2002)COUTINHO, L.M. 2002. O bioma do cerrado. In Eugen Warming e o cerrado brasileiro: um século depois (A.L. Klein, org.). Editora UNESP, Imprensa Oficial do Estado, São Paulo, p.77-91. these forests are considered a non-cerrado vegetation.

Transition areas aroused attention over time, especially in the search for understanding the distribution of its species and the factors that determine them. Ecotones frequently support high levels of biological diversity (Risser 1995RISSER, P.R. 1995. The status of the science examining ecotones: a dynamic aspect of landscape is the area of steep gradients between more homogeneous vegetation associations. Bioscience 45(5):318-325. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1312492
http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1312492...
, Van Rensburg et al. 2009VAN RENSBURG, B.J., LEVIN, N. & KARK, L. 2009. Spatial congruence between ecotones and range-restricted species: implications for conservation biogeography at the sub-continental scale. Divers. Distrib. 15(9): 379-389. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-4642.2008.00545.x
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), though it is controversial whether they represent special areas of speciation and diversity (Kark & Van Rensburg 2006KARK, S. & VAN RENSBURG, B.J. 2006. Ecotones: Marginal or Central Areas of Transition? Isr. J. Ecol. 52(1): 29-53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1560/IJEE.52.1.29
http://dx.doi.org/10.1560/IJEE.52.1.29...
). There are ecotone areas with different environmental characteristics that do not fit the expectation of greater biodiversity than limitrophe areas (Lloyd et al. 2000LLOYD, K.M., McQUEEN, A.A.M., LEE, B.J., WILSON, R.C.B., WALKER, S. & WILSON, J.B. 2000. Evidence on ecotone concepts from switch, environmental and anthropogenic ecotones. J. Veg. Sci. 11(6):903-910. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560
http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560...
). Biodiversity is not intrinsic property of ecotones, since it depends on the particular ecological conditions of the site and on the ecology of the present species (Lloyd et al. 2000LLOYD, K.M., McQUEEN, A.A.M., LEE, B.J., WILSON, R.C.B., WALKER, S. & WILSON, J.B. 2000. Evidence on ecotone concepts from switch, environmental and anthropogenic ecotones. J. Veg. Sci. 11(6):903-910. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560
http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560...
).

The Cerrado was degraded due to the establishment of pastures and other crops, which endangers its immense biodiversity and makes it a global hotspot (Myers et al. 2000MYERS, N., MITTERMEIER, R.A., MITTERMEIER, C.G., FONSECA, G.A.B. & KENT, J. 2000. Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities. Nature 403:853-858.). In São Paulo state, the remnants of “cerrado” are very fragmented (Durigan et al. 2004DURIGAN, G., FRANCO, G.A.D.C. & SIQUEIRA, M.F. 2004. A vegetação dos remanescentes de cerrado no estado de São Paulo. In Viabilidade de conservação dos remanescentes de cerrado no Estado de São Paulo (M.D. Bitencourt & R.R. Mendonça, orgs.). Annablume, Fapesp, São Paulo, p.29-56.) and only 0.5% is protected by some type of conservation unit (Durigan et al. 2006DURIGAN, G., SIQUEIRA, M.F., FRANCO, G.A.D.C. & RATTER, J.A. 2006. Seleção de fragmentos prioritários para a criação de unidades de conservação do cerrado no estado de São Paulo. Rev. Inst. Florest. 18:23-37.). The Cerrado occupied 14% of State of São Paulo and were reduced to 1% of this area (Fiori & Fioravanti 2001FIORI, A. M. & FIORAVANTI, C. 2001. Os caminhos para salvar o Cerrado paulista. Rev. Pesq. Fapesp (63). http://revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/?art=1247&bd=1&pg=1&lg= (ultimo acesso em 04/08/2013).
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), which motivated the development of protective legislation (Brasil 2009BRASIL. 2009. Lei n° 13.550, de 2 de junho de 2009. Dispõe sobre a utilização e proteção da vegetação nativa do Bioma Cerrado no Estado, e dá providências correlatas. Diário Oficial da República Federativa do Brasil, Brasília, DF, 3 jun. 2009. Seção 1, v.119, n.102, p.1.). With the exception of swampy forests, riverine forests are diverse from each other, due to different vegetation types with which they limit (Bernacci et al. 1998BERNACCI, L.C., GOLDENBERG, R. & METZGER, J.P. 1998. Estrutura florística de 15 fragmentos florestais ripários da Bacia do Jacaré-Pepira (SP). Naturalia 23:23-54., Rodrigues & Nave 2000RODRIGUES, R.R. & NAVE, A.G. 2000. Heterogeneidade florística das matas ciliares. In: Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.45-72.). Despite being protected by the Brazilian Forest Code (Código Florestal Brasileiro) as areas of permanent preservation, riverine forests have suffered from urbanization and implementation of agricultural crops and pastures. More recently, legislation has decreased the size of the areas to be maintained as protected (Brasil 2012BRASIL. 2012. Lei n° 12.651, de 25 de maio de 2012. Dispõe sobre a proteção da vegetação nativa; altera as Leis nos 6.938, de 31 de agosto de 1981, 9.393, de 19 de dezembro de 1996, e 11.428, de 22 de dezembro de 2006; revoga as Leis nos 4.771, de 15 de setembro de 1965, e 7.754, de 14 de abril de 1989, e a Medida Provisória no 2.166-67, de 24 de agosto de 2001; e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da República Federativa do Brasil, Brasília, DF, maio. http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_Ato2011-2014/2012/Lei/L12651.htm#art83 (último acesso em 27/11/2012).
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).

Since riverine forests usually show similarities with the surrounding vegetation, despite their great heterogeneity, the aim of this study was to evaluate whether riverine forests in savanna areas are similar to each other. The analysis involved the composition, structure, biodiversity and the species distribution in a riverine forest-cerrado transition, as well as comparison with fragments in similar environments throughout Brazil.

Material and Methods

The study area (Figure 1A) is located at Campinas, SP, in between the coordinates 22° 51′ 21″ and 22° 51′ 27″ S, and 47° 05′ 28″ and 47° 05′ 36″ W, inside an agricultural research farm of Instituto Agronômico (IAC). The region has a subtropical climate (Cwa, Koeppen classification), with an annual mean temperature of 20.3 °C and annual rainfall of 1409.5 mm (Mello et al. 1994MELLO, M.H.A., PEDRO JUNIOR, M.J., ORTOLANI, A.A. & ALFONSI, R.R. 1994. Chuva e temperatura: cem anos de observações em Campinas. IAC, Campinas. Boletim Técnico, n.154.). Soils occurring in the area are Gleysols, Ferralsols and Cambisols, all of them of low base saturation, their distribution depending on proximity to water sources (Carvalho 2012CARVALHO, M.B. 2012. Regime freático e atributos do solo associados a gradiente fisionômico de floresta ripária em área de cerrado em Campinas, SP. Dissertação de Mestrado, Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, Campinas.). The area has been in a process of natural regeneration in the last 40-50 years, but during the study development circulation of cattle and of neighborhood residents was observed, in addition to burnt in the vegetation located very close to the study plots, caused by fire, what is supposed to have affected the area somehow.

Figure 1.
(A) Study area with approximate position of two plots closer to the stream (plots 5.1 and 1.1) from the two extreme transects (transects 1 and 5) (modified from GoogleEarth 2011) and (B) plots diagram, with relative position of the plots to the stream (B).

The Campinas municipality territory, located in the Atlantic Forest domain, had originally Cerrado vegetation, seasonal forest and swampy forest, with predominance of forests and only about 5% of its area corresponding to Cerrado (Kronka et al. 2005KRONKA, F.J.N., NALON, M.A. & MATSUKUMA, C.K. 2005. Inventário da vegetação natural do Estado de São Paulo. Secretaria do Meio Ambiente, Instituto Florestal, São Paulo.). The study area represents a transition from riverine forest to drier Cerrado area. Twenty five plots of 10 × 10 m were set up in five distinct transects (each one with five contiguous plots) approximately perpendicular to the stream (Figure 1B). Distribution of plots is so that all transects represent the two physiognomies: riverine forest and “cerradão”. In transects 3 and 4 (Figure 1B) the two plots farthest from the stream were spaced 10 m far from the other plots of the transect to avoid an existing walking path.

Woody plants, except lianas, with height greater than or equal to 1.5 m and diameter at ground level greater than or equal to 3 cm were collected and identified to determine the floristic composition and vegetation structure. The identification was made by identification keys and specialized bibliography, and by comparison with existing herbarium specimens and consultation with experts. Height was estimated, and perimeter at ground level (PGL) and at breast level (PBL) was measured for each individual.

The floristic list and its phytogeographic domains were checked in the List of Species of the Brazilian Flora (Jardim… 2013), which was also used to verify the synonymy of species names. This list was also compared to a floristic review made by Mendonça et al. (2008)MENDONÇA, R.C., FELFILI, J.M., WALTER, B.M.T., SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., REZENDE, A.V., FILGUEIRAS, T.S., SILVA, P.E.N. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Flora vascular do bioma Cerrado: checklist com 12.356 espécies. In Cerrado: ecologia e flora, (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, orgs.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, v.2, p.421-1279. for the Brazilian Cerrado, with the physiognomic types classified according to Ribeiro & Walter (1998)RIBEIRO, J.F. & WALTER, B.M.T. 1998. As principais fitofisionomias do bioma Cerrado. In Cerrado: Ambiente e Flora (S.M. Sano & S.P. Almeida, eds.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Planaltina, v.1, p.152-212., who studied “cerradão”, “cerradosensu stricto”, “campo cerrado”, “campo sujo” and grassland (“campo limpo”) physiognomies, plus riverine and gallery forests. Forest physiognomies along watercourses were considered in this study as riverine forests (Rodrigues 2000RODRIGUES, R.R. 2000. Florestas ciliares? Uma discussão nomenclatural das formações ciliares. In Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.91-100.), what is consistent with the term alluvial (Veloso et al. 1991VELOSO, H.P., RANGEL FILHO, A.L.R. & LIMA, J.C.A. 1991. Classificação da vegetação brasileira, adaptada a um sistema universal. IBGE, Rio de Janeiro.).

The phytosociological parameters number of individuals, frequency and absolute dominance, importance value index (IVI) and the Shannon-Wiener diversity index (H') were calculated with the software FITOPAC (Shepherd 2010SHEPHERD, G.J. 2010. FITOPAC 2: File Version 2.1.2.85. Departamento de Botânica, UNICAMP, Campinas.) and compared to other studies in areas of Cerrado vegetation and riverine forests from the Southeast and other geographical regions of Brazil. The similarity analysis (cluster), using the Bray-Curtis coefficient and group average as hierarchical clustering method (UPGMA), was performed with data of the present paper and data of other scientific publications that presented the species abundance, considering only species occurring in at least three publications. To verify correlation between the species matrix and the geographic distance matrix, we used the Mantel Test with significance tested by Monte Carlo (1000 permutations) and performed by the PC-Ord software, version 5 (McCune & Mefford 2006McCUNE, B. & MEFFORD, M.J. 2006. PC-ORD: Multivariate analysis of ecological data. version 5. MjM Software Design, Gleneden Beach.).

Results

There were 971 individuals (65 individuals – 6.7% - of standing dead trees) in the study area, belonging to 35 families and 80 species. The richest families were Fabaceae lato sensu (13 species), Meliaceae and Myrtaceae (six species each), Lauraceae and Rutaceae (four species each), which represented 41% of the sampled species (Table 1). We found only one exotic species (Citrus limon (L.) Burm.f. - rangpur), represented by a single individual.

Table 1.
Trees species recorded in a physionomic gradient of riverine forest-cerrado at Campinas, SP, indicating number of inclusion in the IAC herbarium collection and those listed as belonging to cerrado – CE (Mendonça et al. 2008MENDONÇA, R.C., FELFILI, J.M., WALTER, B.M.T., SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., REZENDE, A.V., FILGUEIRAS, T.S., SILVA, P.E.N. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Flora vascular do bioma Cerrado: checklist com 12.356 espécies. In Cerrado: ecologia e flora, (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, orgs.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, v.2, p.421-1279.) – and/or riverine forest – MC/MG (Felfili et al. 2001FELFILI, J.M., MENDONÇA, R.C., WALTER, B.M.T., SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., NÓBREGA, M.G.G., FAGG, C.W., SEVILHA, A.C. & SILVA, M.A. 2001. Flora fanerogâmica das matas de galeria e ciliares do Brasil Central. In: Cerrado: caracterização e recuperação de Matas de Galeria (J.F. Ribeiro, C.E.L. Fonseca & J.C. Sousa-Silva, ed.). Embrapa Cerrados, Planaltina, p.195-263.).

The species with the highest Importance Value Index (Table 2) were Nectandra nitidula (Lauraceae),Gochnatia polymorpha (Asteraceae), Dendropanax cuneatus(Araliaceae), Protium heptaphyllum (Burseraceae) andTrichilia pallida (Meliaceae). Of these species, just Gochnatia polymorpha is not among the five most abundant species and with the highest frequencies, being surpassed by Guarea macrophylla (Meliaceae) in abundance andCecropia pachystachya (Urticaceae) in frequency, equaling toMollinedia widgrenii (Monimiaceae), Siparuna guianensis(Siparunaceae) and Ocotea velloziana (Lauraceae) in the latter parameter. The Shannon-Wiener diversity index (H') was 3.49 nats/individual and the evenness (J) was 0.79 (Table 3).

Table 2.
Phytosociological parameters of the species ordered by IVI (Importance Value Index) from measurements of perimeter at ground level (PGL), sampled in the physiognomic gradient of riverine forest in a Cerrado area in Campinas, SP. NInd - number of individuals; FA - absolute frequency; DoA - absolute dominance; Line – occurrence line from species individuals: 1 – line until 10 meters away from the stream, 2 – until 20 meters away from the stream, 3 – until 30 meters away from the stream, 4 – until 40 meters away from the stream, 5 – until 50 meters away from the stream.

Table 3.
Comparison of density (Dens), basal area (AB), percentage of dead individuals, Shannon-Wiener diversity index (H') and Pielou evenness (J) between the present study, in a physiognomic riverine forest-cerrado gradient at Campinas (SP), and other studies in areas of transition, Cerrado and riverine forest, alphabetically ordered. Data of publications identified with code were also used for the similarity dendrogram. Cont - contiguous plots; Trans - plots in transects; Disj – disjoint plots; DAS - diameter at ground level; D30 – diameter at 30 cm from soil surface; DAP - diameter at breast height. PAS - perimeter at ground level; P30 - perimeter at 30 cm from soil surface; PAP - circumference at breast height.

According to the List of Species of the Brazilian Flora (Jardim… 2013) and considering both Atlantic Forest and Cerrado domains, only five of the identified species in the area were listed as occurring exclusively in the Atlantic Forest (Alchornea sidifolia - Euphorbiaceae, Celtis pubescens - Cannabaceae, Cordia americana - Boraginaceae, Eugenia pluriflora - Myrtaceae - andLuetzelburgia guaissara - Fabaceae) and only two were listed exclusively for the Cerrado domain (Cordia trichotoma - Boraginaceae - and Guettarda pohliana - Rubiaceae). The remaining species were listed as occurring in both domains. In the case of the 25 identified species with physiognomic type specified in the “Lista de Espécies da Flora do Brasil”, 60% (15 species) occur in both Cerrado and in riverine/gallery forest, 20% (5) only in Cerrado, 12% (3) only in riverine/gallery forest and 8% (2) do not occur in any of these two groups of vegetation (Jardim… 2013).

Assuming the classification of Mendonça et al. (2008)MENDONÇA, R.C., FELFILI, J.M., WALTER, B.M.T., SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., REZENDE, A.V., FILGUEIRAS, T.S., SILVA, P.E.N. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Flora vascular do bioma Cerrado: checklist com 12.356 espécies. In Cerrado: ecologia e flora, (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, orgs.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, v.2, p.421-1279., it was noticed that 8.75% of the species (7 species) in this study are listed for Cerrado, 30% (24 species) for riverine/gallery forests, 45% (36 species) for both and 16.25% (13 species) were not listed for Cerrado nor for riverine/gallery forests. Others species, such as Cestrum mariquitense (Solanaceae) and Zanthoxylum acuminatum(Rutaceae) spread over several phytogeographic domains, including Cerrado and Atlantic Forest, while Eugenia uniflora and E. paracatuana(Myrtaceae), and Persea willdenovii (Lauraceae) occurred only in these two domains and Cordia americana (Boraginaceae) andLuetzelburgia guaissara (Fabaceae) only in Atlantic Forest.Cordia americana was sampled in riverine forests in Jardim (MS), where vegetation is influenced by deciduous and semideciduous forests, besides Cerradão (Battilani et al. 2005BATTILANI, J.L., SCREMIN-DIAS, E. & SOUZA, A.L.T. 2005. Fitossociologia de um trecho de mata ciliar do rio da Prata, Jardim, MS, Brasil. Acta Bot. Bras. 19(3):597-608. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0102-33062005000300021
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0102-33062005...
), and in Tibagi (PR), with influence of alluvial and montane mixed rain forest (Dias et al. 1998DIAS, M.C., VIEIRA, A.O.S., NAKAJIMA, J.N., PIMENTA, J.A. & LOBO, P.C. 1998. Composição florística e fitossociologia do componente arbóreo das florestas ciliares do rio Iapó, na bacia do rio Tibagi, Tibagi, PR. Rev. Bras. Bot. 21(2).); Cestrum mariquitense and P. willdenoviioccur in Cerrado physiognomy (C. mariquitense in Itirapina - SP, andP. wildenovii in Assis - SP), both in area of Atlantic Forest domain, or in riverine forests with contact with Cerrado (both in Lavras - MG). Still, in Campinas,P. wildenovii and L. guaissara were sampled in areas of “cerradão” (Viracopos and CEC, respectively) and transitional Cerrado with seasonal forest (Vila Holandia II), in the Anhumas River Basin (Torres et al. 2006; R.B. Torres, personal communication).

Considering the five most important species in the area (Table 2), Mendonça et al. (2008)MENDONÇA, R.C., FELFILI, J.M., WALTER, B.M.T., SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., REZENDE, A.V., FILGUEIRAS, T.S., SILVA, P.E.N. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Flora vascular do bioma Cerrado: checklist com 12.356 espécies. In Cerrado: ecologia e flora, (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, orgs.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, v.2, p.421-1279. listed Dendropanax cuneatus and Nectandra nitidula just for riverine or gallery forests, whereas Gochnatia polymorpha, Protium heptaphyllum and Trichilia pallidaare listed for both riverine/gallery forest and Cerrado, and in the current study all these species were observed in plots closer and in plots farther from the stream or in more well drained soils (Table 2). The data from “Lista de Espécies da Flora do Brasil” (Jardim… 2013) are different just forGochnatia polymorpha, which is listed for Cerrado and also for rainforest, not being listed for riverine/gallery forests.

As can be seen in Table 2, the majority of species was found in plots closer and farther from the stream. Considering the species with 10 or more individuals, Gochnatia polymorpha and Chrysophyllum marginatum were not found only in the first line of occurrence (until 10 meters from the stream) and Copaifera langsdorffii was not found in the line farther (line between 40 and 50 meters from the stream). Styrax camporum was not found in lines 4 (30 to 40 mesters) and 5 (40 to 50 meters), Sebastiania brasiliense in line 3 (20 a 30 meters) and Erythroxylum suberosum in lines 1, 2 and 3.

The basal area calculated from the PGL at Fazenda Santa Elisa (51.2 m2/ha - Table 3) is the second largest of the compiled studies shown on Table 3. When we consider the PBL, the basal area decreases to 29.28 m2/ha, i.e., intermediate to those other areas. The basal area reported for “cerrados” and riverine forests shows large variation depending on sampling sites (Table 3), from 5.6 m2/ha (in a “campo cerrado” – Jaguariaíva, PR) to 75.33 m2/ha (riverine forest – Cuiabá, MT). Overall, riparian forests basal areas were larger than that at “cerrados”, but riverine forest of Coxim (MS) showed exceptionally small basal area (12.78 m2/ha), whereas the “cerrados” of Uberlândia - MG (28.2 and 35 m2/ha) and Pratânia - SP (41 m2/ha) showed very high basal area values.

Shannon-Wiener diversity index at the transitional riverine forest/“cerradão” area of Fazenda Santa Elisa (H = 3.49 nats/ind) is very close to the indices found for a dystrophic-soil “cerradão” at Uberlândia, MG (Moreno et al. 2008MORENO, M.I.C., SCHIAVINI, I. & HARIDASAN, M. 2008. Fatores edáficos influenciando na estrutura de fitofisionomias do cerrado. Caminhos Geogr. 9(25):173-194. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35002501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35002501...
) and a “cerradão” at Uberlândia, MG (Costa & Araujo 2001). The Shannon-Wiener diversity index at Fazenda Santa Elisa was intermediate to the maximum and minimum values (4.33 and 3.41 nats/ind) found at riverine forests in Bom Sucesso – MG (4.33 nats/ind) and Jardim – MS (3.41 nats/ind), very close to the index found in a riverine forest-Cerrado transition in Itirapina (SP) and larger than the values found for a “cerradão”- swampy forest transition in Brotas, SP (Gomes et al. 2004GOMES, B.Z., MARTINS, F.R. & TAMASHIRO, J. 2004. Estrutura do cerradão e da transição entre cerradão e floresta paludícola num fragmento da International Paper do Brasil Ltda., em Brotas, SP. Rev. Bras. Bot. 27(2):249-262. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0100-84042004000200005
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0100-84042004...
). In addition to similar diversity indices, the dystrophic-soil “cerradão” (Moreno et al. 2008MORENO, M.I.C., SCHIAVINI, I. & HARIDASAN, M. 2008. Fatores edáficos influenciando na estrutura de fitofisionomias do cerrado. Caminhos Geogr. 9(25):173-194. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35002501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/35002501...
) and the other “cerradão” (Costa & Araujo 2001), both at Uberlândia, MG, showed Pielou evenness values close to the one of Fazenda Santa Elisa (0.79 – Table 3).

From a similarity matrix composed by 665 species from the publications listed onTable 3 and Table 4, just 241 (36.2%) were selected for clustering since they occurred in three or more surveys. Among those species, none occurred in all surveys, being Casearia sylvestris (Flacourtiaceae) the one with the higher incidence (19 of 33 areas), followed by Tapirira guianensis (Anacardiaceae - 17 occurrences) and Copaifera langsdorffii (Fabaceae - 16 occurrences), all of the three sampled in the Santa Elisa study.

Table 4.
Areas from the municipality of Campinas used in the similarity matrix and for floristic comparison.

The Mantel's test (Monte Carlo ρ = 0.001) opposing geographical distance (geographic coordinates) and species abundance showed a positive association between the matrices (r = 0.282010; Z observed = 0.374977*102; mean Z = 0.365916*102), that means floristic similarity among areas is slightly influenced by their proximity. The dependence of similarity on distance between areas may be due to the great similarity among different areas of Campinas. However, this similarity is not distributed evenly among the different areas of Campinas. The similarity (Figure 2) is greater between the four Cerrado areas of Campinas (Synchrotron Laboratory, CEC, “Viracopos” and “São Marcos”) and a “cerradão”- semideciduous forest transition (Vila Holândia). The dendrogram (Figure 2) shows that similarity of swampy areas is smaller with other phytophysiognomies at Campinas. Through ordination analysis (PCO), the study area was in an intermediate position between Cerrado areas and forests (including swampy areas), although the dendrograms (including ones with complete linkage and with minimum linkage) group swampy areas in opposition to other phytophysiognomies at Campinas (data not shown).

Figure 2.
Similarity analysis using Bray-Curtis coeficient and group average as hierarchical clustering method (UPGMA) to compare the study area to other areas of cerrado, riverine forests and transitional physiognomies of Brazil. ? Study area.

Discussion

In the study area, 22 species had more than 10 individuals each, and the five species with the highest IVI accounted for 41.2% of the total sampled individuals. This is common in Cerrado areas, where there are about 20 dominant species and the other species are scarce (Felfili et al. 2008FELFILI, J.M., FELFILI, M.C., NOGUEIRA, P.E., ARMAS, J.P.S., FARINAS, M.R., NUNES, M., SILVA JÚNIOR, M.C.S., REZENDE, A.V. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Padrões fitogeográficos e sua relação com sistemas de terra no Bioma Cerrado. In: Cerrado: ecologia e flora, v.1 (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, ed.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, p.214-228.). Likewise, in the case of gallery forests, most species occur at low densities, with few species contributing to most individuals (Silva Junior et al. 2001SILVA JUNIOR, M.C., FELFILI, J.M., WALTER, B.M.T., NOGUEIRA, P.E., REZENDE, A.V., MORAIS, R.O. & NÓBREGA, M.G.G. 2001. Análise da flora arbórea de Matas de Galeria no Distrito Federal: 21 levantamentos. In: Cerrado: caracterização e recuperação de Matas de Galeria (J.F. RIBEIRO, C.E.L. FONSECA & J.C. SOUSA-SILVA, ed.). Planaltina: Embrapa Cerrados, p.143-191.).

A large variation in species composition, basal area and other phytosociological parameters were found at the different compared studies. In the Jacaré-Pepira Basin, great structural variability was observed in different fragments along the river: in narrower fragments, the greater influence of the river decreases number of species (Bernacci et al. 1998BERNACCI, L.C., GOLDENBERG, R. & METZGER, J.P. 1998. Estrutura florística de 15 fragmentos florestais ripários da Bacia do Jacaré-Pepira (SP). Naturalia 23:23-54.). Even though forest vegetation near watercourses may have transitional structure, that differs according to the dominant environment (Metzger et al. 1998METZGER, J.P., GOLDENBERG, R. & BERNACCI, L.C. 1998. Diversidade e estrutura de fragmentos de mata de várzea e de mata mesófila semidecídua submontana do rio Jacaré-Pepira (SP). Rev. Bras. Bot. 21(3):321-330. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0100-84041998000300012
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/S0100-84041998...
), which can range from waterlogged to well-drained, it was not possible to distinguish different phytophysiognomies in relation to vegetation structure in the Jacaré-Pepira Basin. In riparian conditions, the hydrology of the area is the main determinant of the distribution and composition of plant species (Rodrigues & Shepherd 2001RODRIGUES, R.R. & SHEPHERD, G.J. 2001. Fatores condicionantes da vegetação ciliar. In: Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.101-108.). The Cerrado areas also have a huge structural variability determined by edaphic characteristics, that generates large differences in height and density of individuals (Rizzini 1997RIZZINI, C.T. 1997. Tratado de fitogeografia do Brasil: aspectos ecológicos, sociológicos e florísticos. Âmbito Cultural Edições Ltda., São Paulo.).

Occurrence of most of the sampled species in this study, including ones with greater local importance, both in riverine forest and in Cerrado (generalist species), and their distribution either in plots close to the stream or in more remote plots with better drained soil, indicates the gradient character of the area, mainly related to differences on species density distribution (Carvalho 2012CARVALHO, M.B. 2012. Regime freático e atributos do solo associados a gradiente fisionômico de floresta ripária em área de cerrado em Campinas, SP. Dissertação de Mestrado, Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, Campinas.). The small number of exclusive Cerrado species in study area indicates that riverine environment represents a very different condition in relation to that of Cerrado. In this same site, species common in savannas asCopaifera langsdorffii, Erythroxylum suberosum andGochnatia polymorpha occurred preferentially where the soil had higher content of sand and water table was deeper, while common species in riparian forests, such asDendropanax cuneatus and Guarea macrophylla, occurred where soil had higher content of clay and the water table was shallower (Carvalho 2012CARVALHO, M.B. 2012. Regime freático e atributos do solo associados a gradiente fisionômico de floresta ripária em área de cerrado em Campinas, SP. Dissertação de Mestrado, Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, Campinas.).

Except for the swampy forest fragments from Campinas, that formed a single similar group, there was low floristic similarity among the riverine forests compared on Table 4. They did not form a homogeneous group, nevertheless showing greater similarity to the cerrado fragments of different regions of Brazil. According toRodrigues & Nave (2000)RODRIGUES, R.R. & NAVE, A.G. 2000. Heterogeneidade florística das matas ciliares. In: Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.45-72., the riverine forests exhibit high floristic heterogeneity, with low values of similarity among themselves and low frequency of species, showing higher floristic similarities with the surrounding non-riparian vegetation than with riparian forests farther away (Rodrigues & Shepherd 2001RODRIGUES, R.R. & SHEPHERD, G.J. 2001. Fatores condicionantes da vegetação ciliar. In: Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.101-108.). Certainly, the fact that riparian forests are present in several domains of different regions in Brazil, contributes for this physiognomy to have species from other physiognomic domains, thus favoring the high floristic diversity among them. Additionally, our results indicate that even considering riverine forests within a single vegetation type such as Cerrado, the diversity among different riparian forests is very large. This result must be due to the diversity of “cerrados”, considered a global hotspot, that even when its local diversity (α) is not very large, it shows large diversity of endemic species, the ones that occur in restricted regions, typical of a particular environment. Still, our results support to state that only swampy areas are more homogeneous and floristically similar (Bernacci et al. 1998BERNACCI, L.C., GOLDENBERG, R. & METZGER, J.P. 1998. Estrutura florística de 15 fragmentos florestais ripários da Bacia do Jacaré-Pepira (SP). Naturalia 23:23-54., Rodrigues & Nave 2000RODRIGUES, R.R. & NAVE, A.G. 2000. Heterogeneidade florística das matas ciliares. In: Matas ciliares: conservação e recuperação (R.R. Rodrigues & H.J. Leitão Filho, ed.). Editora da Universidade de São Paulo: Fapesp, São Paulo, p.45-72.), being very important forests since their species support major environment constraints.

The transition between riparian forests and savannas did not present particular floristic and phytosociological structure. This transition was very variable one to the other, as already observed between different ecotonal areas (Lloyd et al. 2000LLOYD, K.M., McQUEEN, A.A.M., LEE, B.J., WILSON, R.C.B., WALKER, S. & WILSON, J.B. 2000. Evidence on ecotone concepts from switch, environmental and anthropogenic ecotones. J. Veg. Sci. 11(6):903-910. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560
http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3236560...
, Kark & Van Rensburg 2006KARK, S. & VAN RENSBURG, B.J. 2006. Ecotones: Marginal or Central Areas of Transition? Isr. J. Ecol. 52(1): 29-53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1560/IJEE.52.1.29
http://dx.doi.org/10.1560/IJEE.52.1.29...
). Small similarity among the analyzed riverine forests highlights particularities of this type of vegetation and the importance of studying these areas for knowing their flora in each region, especially when considering restoration or management actions. Brazilian former forest legislation (“Código Florestal Brasileiro” - Brasil 1965BRASIL. 1965. Lei n° 4.771, de 15 de setembro de 1965. Institui o novo Código Florestal. Diário Oficial da República Federativa do Brasil, Brasília, DF, set. http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/LEIS/L4771.htm (último acesso em 25/07/2013)
http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/LEI...
) states that rivers less than 10 m wide should have a permanent preservation area of 30 m on each side, represented by riparian vegetation. However, current legislation (Brasil 2012BRASIL. 2012. Lei n° 12.651, de 25 de maio de 2012. Dispõe sobre a proteção da vegetação nativa; altera as Leis nos 6.938, de 31 de agosto de 1981, 9.393, de 19 de dezembro de 1996, e 11.428, de 22 de dezembro de 2006; revoga as Leis nos 4.771, de 15 de setembro de 1965, e 7.754, de 14 de abril de 1989, e a Medida Provisória no 2.166-67, de 24 de agosto de 2001; e dá outras providências. Diário Oficial da República Federativa do Brasil, Brasília, DF, maio. http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_Ato2011-2014/2012/Lei/L12651.htm#art83 (último acesso em 27/11/2012).
http://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_At...
) provides the possibility of reducing the width of areas along watercourses depending on the property size. This study showed that riparian species occur along the entire 50 m distance from the stream, i.e., the whole study area, corroborating the indication that 30 m of riparian vegetation is still a small number, regardless biome, taxonomic group, soil or topography, and that at least 50 m of riparian vegetation should be kept at each side of the drainage channel to ensure maintenance of biodiversity (Metzger 2010METZGER, J.P. 2010. O Código Florestal tem base científica? Nat. Conserv. 8(1):1-8. http://dx.doi.org/10.4322/natcon.00801017
http://dx.doi.org/10.4322/natcon.0080101...
). Because riverine forests have different functions, the vegetation width considered has to be sufficient for fulfilling, at least, the more demanding ecosystem services, thus including biodiversity conservation (Silva et al. 2011SILVA, J.A.A., NOBRE, A.D., MANZATTO, C.V., JOLY, C.A., RODRIGUES, R.R., SKORUPA, L.A., NOBRE, C.A., AHRENS, S., MAY, P.H., SÁ, T.D.A., CUNHA, M.C. & RECH FILHO, E.L. 2011. O Código Florestal e a Ciência: contribuições para o diálogo. SBPC, São Paulo.)

We observed large number of individuals from three different endangered species (São Paulo 2004SÃO PAULO. Secretaria do Meio ambiente – SMA. 2004. Resolução SMA 48 de 21/09/2004. Lista oficial das espécies da flora do Estado de São Paulo ameaçadas de extinção. Diário Oficial do Estado de São Paulo, São Paulo, 22 set. v.114, n.179.) in the study area:Luetzelburgia guaissara and Myroxylon peruiferum(Fabaceae) and Trichilia hirta (Meliaceae), with 2, 8 and 1 individuals, respectively. The occurrence of rare and endangered species and the importance of maintaining biodiversity conservation has been highlighted for fragments of native vegetation in areas of cerrado (Felfili et al. 2008FELFILI, J.M., FELFILI, M.C., NOGUEIRA, P.E., ARMAS, J.P.S., FARINAS, M.R., NUNES, M., SILVA JÚNIOR, M.C.S., REZENDE, A.V. & FAGG, C.W. 2008. Padrões fitogeográficos e sua relação com sistemas de terra no Bioma Cerrado. In: Cerrado: ecologia e flora, v.1 (S.M. Sano, S.P. Almeida & J.F. Ribeiro, ed.). Embrapa Informação Tecnológica, Brasília, p.214-228.). Although the study area is under regeneration and has received traffic of people with non-research purposes, the occurrence of one single exotic individual and high number of individuals of endangered species shows the area retains much of the original characteristics of the native vegetation and reinforces the importance of this small ecotonal area of riverine forest transitional to Cerrado.

To the research scientists Dr. Elsie Guimarães, Dr. João Renato Stehmann, MSc. Jorge Y. Tamashiro, MSc. Leandro Lacerda Giacomin and Dr. Marcos Sobral for helping on plant identification. To CAPES (Brazilian Government Agency for Education Promotion) for granting a M.Sc. scholarship to the first author; and FAPESP (São Paulo State Foundation for Research Support) for supporting the research (Process no. 2010/16507-9). To Dr. Roseli B. Torres for kindly making available the original vegetation data from Anhumas river basin. To Dr. Luciana F. Alves for helping with the abstract review.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Sept 2013

History

  • Received
    11 Mar 2013
  • Reviewed
    6 Aug 2013
  • Accepted
    21 Aug 2013
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