Biogeographic affinity partly shapes woody plant diversity along an elevational gradient in subtropical forests.

IF 6.3 1区 生物学 Q1 PLANT SCIENCES
Plant Diversity Pub Date : 2025-06-19 eCollection Date: 2025-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.pld.2025.06.004
Zhaochen Zhang, Fang Wang, Xiaoran Wang, Mufan Sun, Pu Zheng, Jingchao Zhao, Junhong Chen, Min Guan, Pengcheng Liu, Xiaofan Shang, Yaoshun Lu, Qingpei Yang, Qingni Song, Lin Chen, Quying Zhong, Jian Zhang
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Abstract

The ecological and evolutionary mechanisms underlying montane biodiversity patterns remain unresolved. To understand which factors determined community assembly rules in mountains, biogeographic affinity that represents the biogeographic and evolutionary history of species should incorporate with current environments. We aim to address two following questions: 1) How does plant taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity with disparate biogeographic affinities vary along the subtropical elevational gradient? 2) How do biogeographic affinity and environmental drivers regulate the community assembly? We collected woody plant survey data of 32 forest plots in a subtropical mountain of Mt. Guanshan with typical transitional characteristics, including 250 woody plant species belonging to 56 families and 118 genera. We estimated the effects of biogeographic affinity, climate and soil properties on taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity of plant communities employing linear regression and structural equation models. We found that the richness of temperate-affiliated species increased with elevations, but the evenness decreased, while tropical-affiliated species had no significant patterns. Winter temperature directly or indirectly via biogeographic affinity shaped the assemblage of woody plant communities along elevations. Biogeographic affinity affected what kind of species could colonize higher elevations while local environment determined their fitness to adapt. These results suggest that biogeographic affinity and local environment jointly lead to the dominance of temperate-affiliated species at higher elevations and shape the diversity of woody plant communities along elevational gradients. Our findings highlight the legacy effect of biogeographic affinity on the composition and structure of subtropical montane forests.

生物地理亲和性在一定程度上决定了亚热带森林木本植物的海拔梯度。
山地生物多样性格局的生态和进化机制仍未得到解决。为了了解是什么因素决定了山地群落的聚集规律,代表物种生物地理和进化历史的生物地理亲缘性应该与当前的环境相结合。本文主要研究以下两个问题:1)具有不同生物地理亲缘关系的植物分类学和系统发育多样性在亚热带海拔梯度上的变化规律;2)生物地理亲和性和环境驱动因素如何调节群落聚集?本文收集了具有典型过渡性特征的关山亚热带山区32个样地的木本植物调查资料,包括56科118属250种木本植物。利用线性回归和结构方程模型估计了生物地理亲和性、气候和土壤性质对植物群落分类和系统发育多样性的影响。温带属种的丰富度随海拔的升高而增加,但均匀度随海拔的升高而降低,而热带属种则没有明显的变化规律。冬季温度直接或间接地通过生物地理亲和性塑造了木本植物群落沿海拔的组合。生物地理亲和性决定了物种在高海拔地区的生存能力,而当地环境决定了物种的适应能力。这些结果表明,生物地理亲和性和局地环境共同导致了高海拔地区温属物种的优势,并决定了木本植物群落沿海拔梯度的多样性。研究结果表明,生物地理亲和性对亚热带山地森林的组成和结构具有重要影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Plant Diversity
Plant Diversity Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
1863
审稿时长
35 days
期刊介绍: Plant Diversity (formerly Plant Diversity and Resources) is an international plant science journal that publishes substantial original research and review papers that advance our understanding of the past and current distribution of plants, contribute to the development of more phylogenetically accurate taxonomic classifications, present new findings on or insights into evolutionary processes and mechanisms that are of interest to the community of plant systematic and evolutionary biologists. While the focus of the journal is on biodiversity, ecology and evolution of East Asian flora, it is not limited to these topics. Applied evolutionary issues, such as climate change and conservation biology, are welcome, especially if they address conceptual problems. Theoretical papers are equally welcome. Preference is given to concise, clearly written papers focusing on precisely framed questions or hypotheses. Papers that are purely descriptive have a low chance of acceptance. Fields covered by the journal include: plant systematics and taxonomy- evolutionary developmental biology- reproductive biology- phylo- and biogeography- evolutionary ecology- population biology- conservation biology- palaeobotany- molecular evolution- comparative and evolutionary genomics- physiology- biochemistry
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