4.5 Article

Climate and soil attributes determine plant species turnover in global drylands

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 41, Issue 12, Pages 2307-2319

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12377

Keywords

Aridity; beta diversity; climatic variability; global environmental change; habitat filtering; latitudinal gradient; plant community assembly; regression analysis; soil fertility; spatial soil heterogeneity

Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Community [242658]
  2. Ciencia y Tecnologia para el Desarrollo (CYTED) program [Accion 407AC0323]
  3. CONICYT/FONDAP [15110009]
  4. CONICYT/FONDECYT [110228]

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AimGeographical, climatic and soil factors are major drivers of plant beta diversity, but their importance for dryland plant communities is poorly known. The aim of this study was to: (1) characterize patterns of beta diversity in global drylands; (2) detect common environmental drivers of beta diversity; and (3) test for thresholds in environmental conditions driving potential shifts in plant species composition. LocationGlobal. MethodsBeta diversity was quantified in 224 dryland plant communities from 22 geographical regions on all continents except Antarctica using four complementary measures: the percentage of singletons (species occurring at only one site); Whittaker's beta diversity, (W); a directional beta diversity metric based on the correlation in species occurrences among spatially contiguous sites, (R-2); and a multivariate abundance-based metric, (MV). We used linear modelling to quantify the relationships between these metrics of beta diversity and geographical, climatic and soil variables. ResultsSoil fertility and variability in temperature and rainfall, and to a lesser extent latitude, were the most important environmental predictors of beta diversity. Metrics related to species identity [percentage of singletons and (W)] were most sensitive to soil fertility, whereas those metrics related to environmental gradients and abundance [((R-2) and (MV)] were more associated with climate variability. Interactions among soil variables, climatic factors and plant cover were not important determinants of beta diversity. Sites receiving less than 178mm of annual rainfall differed sharply in species composition from more mesic sites (> 200mm). Main conclusionsSoil fertility and variability in temperature and rainfall are the most important environmental predictors of variation in plant beta diversity in global drylands. Our results suggest that those sites annually receiving c. 178mm of rainfall will be especially sensitive to future climate changes. These findings may help to define appropriate conservation strategies for mitigating effects of climate change on dryland vegetation.

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