Back to Search Start Over

Direct and indirect effects of climate on richness drive the latitudinal diversity gradient in forest trees

Authors :
Glen Reynolds
Guochun Shen
Shujun Wen
Billy C.H. Hau
Hervé Memiaghe
George D. Weiblen
David Storch
Keping Ma
Guangze Jin
Zhiyao Su
Fangliang He
Andy Hector
Jiangshan Lai
Bin Wang
Gary G. Mittelbach
William J. McShea
Weiguo Sang
Yingming Zhang
David A. Orwig
Ya-Huang Luo
Juyu Lian
David Kenfack
Xiujuan Qiao
Xihua Wang
Richard Condit
Ming Ni
Xiankun Li
Alfonso Alonso
Xiangcheng Mi
Jiaxin Zhang
Qing He
Xiaotong Zhang
Lian-Ming Gao
Wusheng Xiang
Stephen P. Hubbell
Kai Zhu
James A. Lutz
Geoffrey G. Parker
Kristina J. Anderson-Teixeira
Suqin Fang
Kamil Král
Jess K. Zimmerman
Norm Bourg
Wanhui Ye
Xinghua Sui
Luxiang Lin
Zhanqin Hao
Bingwei Zhang
Yankun Liu
Han Xu
Yide Li
Min Cao
Buhang Li
Xugao Wang
Hazel M. Chapman
Haibao Ren
Xue Yin
Nianxun Xi
Michael O'Brien
Kun Xu
Iveren Abiem
Youshi Wang
Chengjin Chu
Gunter A. Fischer
Mingxi Jiang
Alexandre Adalardo de Oliveira
Yu Liu
Tomáš Vrška
David F. R. P. Burslem
I-Fang Sun
Jonathan Myers
Jennifer L. Baltzer
Songyan Tian
Source :
Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Climate is widely recognised as an important determinant of the latitudinal diversity gradient. However, most existing studies make no distinction between direct and indirect effects of climate, which substantially hinders our understanding of how climate constrains biodiversity globally. Using data from 35 large forest plots, we test hypothesised relationships amongst climate, topography, forest structural attributes (stem abundance, tree size variation and stand basal area) and tree species richness to better understand drivers of latitudinal tree diversity patterns. Climate influences tree richness both directly, with more species in warm, moist, aseasonal climates and indirectly, with more species at higher stem abundance. These results imply direct limitation of species diversity by climatic stress and more rapid (co-)evolution and narrower niche partitioning in warm climates. They also support the idea that increased numbers of individuals associated with high primary productivity are partitioned to support a greater number of species.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositório Institucional da USP (Biblioteca Digital da Produção Intelectual), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), instacron:USP
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b844f854856739720c19895484c9d025