4.8 Article

Environmental filtering explains a U-shape latitudinal pattern in regional β-deviation for eastern North American trees

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 284-291

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.13188

Keywords

Beta diversity; community assembly; environmental filtering; metacommunity; range size; species abundance distribution; species aggregation

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Funding

  1. NSERC (Canada) grant

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The underlying drivers of beta-diversity along latitudinal gradients have been unclear. Previous studies have focused on beta-diversities calculated at a local scale and shed limited light on regional beta-diversity. We tested the much-debated effects of range size vs. environmental filtering on the beta-gradient using data from the US Forest Inventory Analysis Program. We showed that the drivers of the beta-gradient were scale dependent. At the local scale species spatial patterns contributed little to the beta-gradient, whereas at the regional scale spatial patterns dominated the gradient and a U-shape latitudinal relationship for the standardised beta-diversity deviation was revealed. The relationship can be explained by spatial variation in climate and soil texture, thus supporting the environmental filtering hypothesis. But it is inconsistent with Rapoport's rule about the effect of range size on beta-gradient. These results resolve the debate on whether species spatial distributions contribute to beta-gradient and attest the importance of environmental filtering in determining regional beta-diversity.

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