4.7 Article

The thermal niche and phylogenetic assembly of evergreen tree metacommunities in a mid-to-upper tropical montane zone

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0038

Keywords

frost; freezing temperatures; temperature variation; tropical elevation gradient; phylogenetic community structure; evergreen woody metacommunity

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This study investigates the impact of frost and freezing temperatures on the taxonomic and phylogenetic structure of evergreen forests along a mid-upper montane elevation gradient in Western Ghats, India. The results indicate that frost filters out lowland tropical clades and allows extra-tropical lineages to establish at higher elevations, resulting in phylogenetic overdispersion in the shola metacommunity. Both minimum winter temperature and patch size play important roles in determining the metacommunity structure.
Frost and freezing temperatures have posed an obstacle to tropical woody evergreen plants over evolutionary time scales. Thus, along tropical elevation gradients, frost may influence woody plant community structure by filtering out lowland tropical clades and allowing extra-tropical lineages to establish at higher elevations. Here we assess the extent to which frost and freezing temperatures influence the taxonomic and phylogenetic structure of naturally patchy evergreen forests (locally known as shola) along a mid-upper montane elevation gradient in the Western Ghats, India. Specifically, we examine the role of large-scale macroclimate and factors affecting local microclimates, including shola patch size and distance from shola edge, in driving shola metacommunity structure. We find that the shola metacommunity shows phylogenetic overdispersion with elevation, with greater representation of extra-tropical lineages above 2000 m, and marked turnover in taxonomic composition of shola woody communities near the frost-affected forest edge above 2000 m, from those below 2000 m. Both minimum winter temperature and patch size were equally important in determining metacommunity structure, with plots inside very large sholas dominated by older tropical lineages, with many endemics. Phylogenetic overdispersion in the upper montane shola metacommunity thus resulted from tropical lineages persisting in the interiors of large closed frost-free sholas, where their regeneration niche has been preserved over time.

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