4.8 Article

Phylogenetic dispersion and diversity in regional assemblages of seed plants in China

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1822153116

Keywords

environmental filtering; niche conservatism; phylogenetic diversity; phylogenetic relatedness; seed plants

Funding

  1. Key Projects of the Joint Fund of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1802232]
  2. Major Program of the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31590823]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA20050203]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31700165, 31600340, 31870506]
  5. Youth Innovation Promotion Association Chinese Academy of Sciences [2019382]
  6. Young Academic and Technical Leader Raising Foundation of Yunnan Province [2019HB039]
  7. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20181398]

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Species assemble into communities through ecological and evolutionary processes. Phylogenetic niche conservatism-the tendency of species to retain ancestral ecological distributions-is thought to influence which species from a regional species pool can persist in a particular environment. We analyzed data for seed plants in China to test hypotheses about the distribution of species within regional floras. Of 16 environmental variables, actual evapotranspiration, minimum temperature of the coldest month, and annual precipitation most strongly influenced regional species richness, phylogenetic dispersion, and phylogenetic diversity for both gymnosperms (cone-bearing plants) and angiosperms (flowering plants). For most evolutionary clades at, and above, the family level, the relationships between metrics of phylogenetic dispersion (i.e., average phylogenetic distance among species), or phylogenetic diversity, and the 3 environmental variables were consistent with the tropical niche conservatism hypothesis, which predicts closer phylogenetic relatedness and reduced phylogenetic diversity with increasing environmental stress. The slopes of the relationships between phylogenetic relatedness and the 3 environmental drivers identified in this analysis were steeper for primarily tropical clades, implying greater niche conservatism, than for primarily temperate clades. These observations suggest that the distributions of seed plants across large-scale environmental gradients in China are constrained by conserved adaptations to the physical environment, i.e., phylogenetic niche conservatism.

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