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1.
Front Plant Sci ; 14: 1303022, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38143583

RESUMEN

Introduction: Functional trait-based approaches are extensively applied to the study of mechanisms governing community assembly along environmental gradients. These approaches have been classically based on studying differences in mean values among species, but there is increasing recognition that alternative metrics of trait distributions should be considered to decipher the mechanisms determining community assembly and species coexistence. Under this framework, the main aim of this study is to unravel the effects of environmental conditions as drivers of plant community assembly in sub-Mediterranean ecotones. Methods: We set 60 plots in six plant communities of a sub-Mediterranean forest in Central Spain, and measured key above- and belowground functional traits in 411 individuals belonging to 19 species, along with abiotic variables. We calculated community-weighted mean (CWM), skewness (CWS) and kurtosis (CWK) of three plant dimensions, and used maximum likelihood techniques to analyze how variation in these functional community traits was driven by abiotic factors. Additionally, we estimated the relative contribution of intraspecific trait variability and species turnover to variation in CWM. Results and discussion: The first three axes of variation of the principal component analyses were related to three main plant ecological dimensions: Leaf Economics Spectrum, Root Economics Spectrum and plant hydraulic architecture, respectively. Type of community was the most important factor determining differences in the functional structure among communities, as compared to the role of abiotic variables. We found strong differences among communities in their CWMs in line with their biogeographic origin (Eurosiberian vs Mediterranean), while differences in CWS and CWK indicate different trends in the functional structure among communities and the coexistence of different functional strategies, respectively. Moreover, changes in functional composition were primarily due to intraspecific variability. Conclusion: We observed a high number of strategies in the forest with the different communities spreading along the acquisitive-conservative axis of resource-use, partly matching their Eurosiberian-Mediterranean nature, respectively. Intraspecific trait variability, rather than species turnover, stood as the most relevant factor when analyzing functional changes and assembly patterns among communities. Altogether, our data support the notion that ecotones are ecosystems where relatively minor environmental shifts may result in changes in plant and functional composition.

2.
Lima; Perú. Ministerio de Salud. Instituto Nacional de Salud; 9 ed; Jun. 2013. 119 p. ilus.
Monografía en Español | LILACS, MINSAPERU | ID: biblio-1181563

RESUMEN

La versión de la publicación es una actualización de los datos consignados en las tablas peruanas de composición de alimentos, publicadas en el año 2009. Asimismo, se ha basado en el recojo de muestras en las zonas de mayor producción y de mayor consumo de la población, y analizadas en los laboratorios considerando metodologías nacionales e internacionales. Se ha considerado la actualización de 32 e incorporando 77 grupos de cereales, verduras, hortalizas y derivados, frutas y derivados, huevos y derivados, leguminosas y derivados, tubérculos, raíces y derivados


Asunto(s)
Tabla de Composición de los Alimentos , Composición de Alimentos , Análisis de los Alimentos , Perú
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