4.7 Article

Midpoint attractor models resolve the mid-elevation peak in Himalayan plant species richness

Journal

ECOGRAPHY
Volume 44, Issue 11, Pages 1665-1677

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.05901

Keywords

elevational gradient; geometric constraints; Himalayas; mid-domain effect; midpoint attractor; neutral theory; null models; species ranges; species richness peak; vascular plants

Funding

  1. Czech Science Foundation [GACR 21-26883S]
  2. Czech Academy of Sciences [RVO 67985939]

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The study explored species richness gradients and the performance of Midpoint Attractor (MPA) models in different species groups using elevational distribution data for plant species in the northwest Himalaya. The research found contrasting estimates of MPA location for species groups originating in lowlands, suggesting a modification of the MPA model to account for environmental favorability peaks outside the study domain.
The midpoint attractor (MPA) models of species richness integrate a unimodal environmental favourability gradient and neutral effects forced by geometric constraints and thus extend the ecologically neutral mid-domain model. However, both alternative MPA algorithms assume that underlying environmental favourability peaks within the modelling domain. Here, we used elevational distribution data for 1054 plant species occurring in northwest Himalaya to explore species richness gradients and MPA performance in species groups defined by biogeography, taxonomy and life-form. MPA models achieved an excellent fit, but the two MPA algorithms produced contrasting estimates of MPA location, especially for species groups with richness originating in lowlands. Therefore, we propose a modification of the MPA model accounting for the environmental favourability peak outside the study domain to reflect these situations. Biogeographic origin was more decisive for MPA location than taxonomic or life-form classification, indicating relatively low climatic niche conservatism in plants.

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