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Human and environmental factors shape tree species assemblages in West African tropical forests

Human and environmental factors shape tree species assemblages in West African tropical forests
Human and environmental factors shape tree species assemblages in West African tropical forests

Aim: This study investigated how human activities and local environmental variables shape tree assemblages (species composition in a defined location), comparing their effects on edible and inedible tree species. Three hypotheses were tested: (1) Environmental filtering impacts spatial beta-diversity more than dispersal limitation; (2) human activities significantly influence regional tree beta-diversity; and (3) predictors of beta-diversity differ between edible and inedible species. Location: Tropical forest in Nigeria and Cameroon in West and Central Africa. Methods: Tree data were collected between 2002 and 2019 from 66 forest plots. Species were categorised as edible and inedible by humans using interviews and online databases. Pairwise beta-diversity (partitioned into total beta-diversity and turnover) between plots was analysed using Generalised Dissimilarity Models (GDMs) with geographical distance, plot-specific variables (forest composition, climate, elevation, stem density, human influence indicators), and human influence indicators (distance to closest human presence [DCHP], and nearest anthropogenic edges [DNAE]) as predictors. Results: The dataset included 236 edible species (11,097 stems) and 472 inedible species (17,202 stems), with high species turnover (> 90%) dominating beta-diversity patterns. Due to local plot-level factors, environmental filtering (deviance explained for all species: 37.4%, edible: 18.9% and inedible: 31.4%) exerted greater influence on species assemblages than geographical distance alone. Beta-diversity drivers differed between edible and inedible species: elevation strongly influenced turnover in inedible species, whereas forest composition significantly shaped the assemblage of edible species, reflecting patterns of human-mediated species selection and species dominance. Human presence impacted the overall beta-diversity of inedible species but only influenced the turnover component of edible species. Main Conclusions: Tree assemblages in the Nigeria–Cameroon forest region were primarily structured by local environmental conditions and human activities rather than by dispersal limitation. Effective conservation should incorporate sustainable human activities and traditional ecological knowledge, with further research needed to explore the long-term anthropogenic impacts on these forests.

West Africa, beta-diversity, elevational variability, environmental gradients, forest composition, generalised dissimilarity models (GDMs), human presence, species turnover, tree species assemblages, tropical forest
1472-4642
Asuk, Sijeh Agbor
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Wayman, Joseph P.
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Sadler, Jonathan P.
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Pugh, Thomas A.M.
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Matthews, Thomas J.
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Ebu, Vincent T.
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Philips, Oliver L.
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Lewis, Simon L.
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Sonke, Bonaventure
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Talbot, Joey
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Comiskey, James
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Zemago, Lise
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Ojo, Lucas
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Begne, Serge K.
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Taedoumg, Hermann
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Sunderland, Terry
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Hubau, Wannes
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Droissart, Vincent
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Qie, Lan
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Gilpin, Martin B.
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Simo-Droissart, Murielle
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Feldpausch, Ted R.
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Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
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Banin, Lindsay F.
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Kamdem, Marie Noel Djuikouo
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Kettridge, Nicholas
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et al.
Asuk, Sijeh Agbor
98bbbf93-76a0-4c69-9615-3a824d008a79
Wayman, Joseph P.
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Sadler, Jonathan P.
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Pugh, Thomas A.M.
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Matthews, Thomas J.
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Ebu, Vincent T.
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Philips, Oliver L.
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Lewis, Simon L.
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Sonke, Bonaventure
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Talbot, Joey
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Comiskey, James
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Zemago, Lise
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Ojo, Lucas
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Begne, Serge K.
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Taedoumg, Hermann
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Sunderland, Terry
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Hubau, Wannes
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Droissart, Vincent
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Qie, Lan
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Gilpin, Martin B.
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Simo-Droissart, Murielle
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Feldpausch, Ted R.
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Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
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Banin, Lindsay F.
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Kamdem, Marie Noel Djuikouo
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Kettridge, Nicholas
95fe940d-9cd2-4109-a1e4-ca85593d56a6

et al. (2025) Human and environmental factors shape tree species assemblages in West African tropical forests. Diversity and Distributions, 31 (8), [e70075]. (doi:10.1111/ddi.70075).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Aim: This study investigated how human activities and local environmental variables shape tree assemblages (species composition in a defined location), comparing their effects on edible and inedible tree species. Three hypotheses were tested: (1) Environmental filtering impacts spatial beta-diversity more than dispersal limitation; (2) human activities significantly influence regional tree beta-diversity; and (3) predictors of beta-diversity differ between edible and inedible species. Location: Tropical forest in Nigeria and Cameroon in West and Central Africa. Methods: Tree data were collected between 2002 and 2019 from 66 forest plots. Species were categorised as edible and inedible by humans using interviews and online databases. Pairwise beta-diversity (partitioned into total beta-diversity and turnover) between plots was analysed using Generalised Dissimilarity Models (GDMs) with geographical distance, plot-specific variables (forest composition, climate, elevation, stem density, human influence indicators), and human influence indicators (distance to closest human presence [DCHP], and nearest anthropogenic edges [DNAE]) as predictors. Results: The dataset included 236 edible species (11,097 stems) and 472 inedible species (17,202 stems), with high species turnover (> 90%) dominating beta-diversity patterns. Due to local plot-level factors, environmental filtering (deviance explained for all species: 37.4%, edible: 18.9% and inedible: 31.4%) exerted greater influence on species assemblages than geographical distance alone. Beta-diversity drivers differed between edible and inedible species: elevation strongly influenced turnover in inedible species, whereas forest composition significantly shaped the assemblage of edible species, reflecting patterns of human-mediated species selection and species dominance. Human presence impacted the overall beta-diversity of inedible species but only influenced the turnover component of edible species. Main Conclusions: Tree assemblages in the Nigeria–Cameroon forest region were primarily structured by local environmental conditions and human activities rather than by dispersal limitation. Effective conservation should incorporate sustainable human activities and traditional ecological knowledge, with further research needed to explore the long-term anthropogenic impacts on these forests.

Text
DDI-2024-0298.R2 - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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Submitted date: 12 April 2025
Accepted/In Press date: 13 August 2025
Published date: 26 August 2025
Keywords: West Africa, beta-diversity, elevational variability, environmental gradients, forest composition, generalised dissimilarity models (GDMs), human presence, species turnover, tree species assemblages, tropical forest

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 503988
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503988
ISSN: 1472-4642
PURE UUID: 959bd43f-4803-4dc9-9dd8-ff1700862358
ORCID for Kelvin S.-H. Peh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2921-1341

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Date deposited: 21 Aug 2025 05:04
Last modified: 17 Oct 2025 16:56

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Contributors

Author: Sijeh Agbor Asuk
Author: Joseph P. Wayman
Author: Jonathan P. Sadler
Author: Thomas A.M. Pugh
Author: Thomas J. Matthews
Author: Vincent T. Ebu
Author: Oliver L. Philips
Author: Simon L. Lewis
Author: Bonaventure Sonke
Author: Joey Talbot
Author: James Comiskey
Author: Lise Zemago
Author: Lucas Ojo
Author: Serge K. Begne
Author: Hermann Taedoumg
Author: Terry Sunderland
Author: Wannes Hubau
Author: Vincent Droissart
Author: Lan Qie
Author: Martin B. Gilpin
Author: Murielle Simo-Droissart
Author: Ted R. Feldpausch
Author: Lindsay F. Banin
Author: Marie Noel Djuikouo Kamdem
Author: Nicholas Kettridge
Corporate Author: et al.

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