a b s t r a c t Fire plays an important role in determining the structure of the vegetation of savannas. Consequently, frequent fires are expected to assemble closely related plant species with very similar fire-related functional traits. We assessed the influence of different fire frequencies on patterns of co-occurrence of woody species at a fine spatial scale in Brazilian savannas. We used quantile regressions to test the relationship between co-occurrence indices and both phylogenetic distances and functional differences, calculated for every possible pair of species. Our results indicated that fire changes the pattern of co-occurrence of woody plants. Functionally different species co-occurred predominantly in a site protected from fire, whereas functionally similar species co-occurred predominantly in sites frequently burned. However, we did not find correlations between co-occurrence and phylogenetic distance of species, due probably to the random distribution of some functional traits in the phylogeny of savanna species. Thus, fire acts as an important environmental filter at fine spatial scales in Brazilian savannas, promoting functional – but not phylogenetic – clustering of plants.
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