4.7 Article

Disentangling the Interspecific and Intraspecific Variation in Functional Traits of Desert Plant Communities under Different Moisture Gradients

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13071088

Keywords

functional traits; community construction; moisture gradient; soil physical and chemical factors

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of Xinjiang Province [2022D01C42]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42171026]

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Studying the variation in plant functional traits can help understand their environmental adaptation strategies and mechanisms of community construction. In this study, the desert plant community in Lake Ebinur watershed was investigated, focusing on five different traits. The results showed that the values of these traits varied with water gradient and there were differences in intraspecific variation under different moisture conditions. The contribution of inter- and intraspecific variation to community weighting also varied with moisture gradient.
Studying the inter- and intraspecific variation in plant functional traits elucidates their environmental adaptation strategies and the mechanisms of community construction. This study selected the desert plant community in the Lake Ebinur watershed as the research object and considered five different traits: plant height (H), diameter at breast height/base diameter (DBH/BD), leaf length (LL), leaf width (LW), and leaf thickness (LT). This study used redundancy and correlation analyses to investigate the inter- and intraspecies variation in community-level traits, its relationship with soil physicochemical factors under different soil moisture conditions, and their change laws. We also used variance decomposition to analyze the contribution of inter- and intraspecific variation to community weighting. The results showed the following: (1) the values of the plant community functional traits varied according to the water gradient, and the LL (p = 0.01) and DBH/BD (p = 0.038) varied significantly; (2) for intraspecific variation, the DBH/BD variation was high at a low moisture gradient, LL (p = 0.018) and LT (p = 0.030) variation were high at a high moisture gradient, and the differences were significant; (3) under a high moisture gradient, inter- and intraspecific variation contributed 85.8% and 35.7% to community weighting, respectively, whereas under low moisture gradients, inter- and intraspecific variation contributed 53.3% and 25.1%, respectively.

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