Negaunee Institute for Plant Conservation Science, Chicago Botanic Garden, 1000 Lake Cook Road, Glencoe, Illinois, 60022, USA.
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 430 Lincoln Drive, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706, USA.
Am J Bot. 2022 Dec;109(12):1991-2005. doi: 10.1002/ajb2.16085. Epub 2022 Nov 28.
Numerous processes influence plant distributions and co-occurrence patterns, including ecological sorting, limiting similarity, and stochastic effects. To discriminate among these processes and determine the spatial scales at which they operate, we investigated how functional traits and phylogenetic relatedness influence the distribution of temperate forest herbs.
We surveyed understory plant communities across 257 forest stands in Wisconsin and Michigan (USA) and applied Bayesian phylogenetic linear mixed-effects models (PGLMMs) to quantify how functional traits and phylogenetic relatedness influence the environmental distribution of 139 herbaceous plant species along broad edaphic, climatic, and light gradients. These models also allowed us to test how functional and phylogenetic similarity affect species co-occurrence within microsites.
Leaf height, specific leaf area, and seed mass all influenced individualistic plant distributions along landscape-scale gradients in soil texture, soil fertility, light availability, and climate. In contrast, phylogenetic relationships did not consistently predict species-environment relationships. Neither functionally similar nor phylogenetically related herbs segregated among microsites within forest stands.
Trait-mediated ecological sorting appears to drive temperate-forest community assembly, generating individualistic plant distributions along regional environmental gradients. This finding links classic studies in plant ecology and prior research in plant physiological ecology to current trait-based approaches in community ecology. However, our results fail to support the common assumption that limiting similarity governs local plant co-occurrences. Strong ecological sorting among forest stands coupled with stochastic fine-scale interactions among species appear to weaken deterministic, niche-based assembly processes at local scales.
许多过程影响植物的分布和共存模式,包括生态分类、限制相似性和随机效应。为了区分这些过程并确定它们作用的空间尺度,我们研究了功能特征和系统发育相关性如何影响温带森林草本植物的分布。
我们在威斯康星州和密歇根州(美国)的 257 个林分中调查了林下植物群落,并应用贝叶斯系统发育线性混合效应模型(PGLMM)来量化功能特征和系统发育相关性如何影响 139 种草本植物物种在广泛的土壤、气候和光照梯度上的环境分布。这些模型还允许我们测试功能和系统发育相似性如何影响微生境内物种的共存。
叶片高度、比叶面积和种子质量都影响个体植物在土壤质地、土壤肥力、光照可用性和气候等景观尺度梯度上的分布。相比之下,系统发育关系并不总是能预测物种与环境的关系。无论是功能上相似的还是系统发育上相关的草本植物,都不会在林分内的微生境中分开。
特征介导的生态分类似乎驱动了温带森林群落的组装,在区域环境梯度上产生了个体植物的分布。这一发现将植物生态学的经典研究和植物生理生态学的先前研究与当前群落生态学中的基于特征的方法联系起来。然而,我们的结果不支持限制相似性控制局部植物共存的常见假设。林分内强烈的生态分类加上物种之间随机的细尺度相互作用,似乎削弱了局部尺度上基于生态位的确定性组装过程。