Li Fangbing, Qian Hong, Sardans Jordi, Amishev Dzhamal Y, Wang Zixuan, Zhang Changyue, Wu Tonggui, Xu Xiaoniu, Tao Xiao, Huang Xingzhao
Anhui Province Key Laboratory of Forest Resources and Silviculture, Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei 230036, China.
State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture, Zhejiang A&F University, Hangzhou 311300, China.
Plant Divers. 2024 Apr 10;46(3):283-293. doi: 10.1016/j.pld.2024.04.002. eCollection 2024 May.
The effect of evolutionary history on wood density variation may play an important role in shaping variation in wood density, but this has largely not been tested. Using a comprehensive global dataset including 27,297 measurements of wood density from 2621 tree species worldwide, we test the hypothesis that the legacy of evolutionary history plays an important role in driving the variation of wood density among tree species. We assessed phylogenetic signal in different taxonomic (e.g., angiosperms and gymnosperms) and ecological (e.g., tropical, temperate, and boreal) groups of tree species, explored the biogeographical and phylogenetic patterns of wood density, and quantified the relative importance of current environmental factors (e.g., climatic and soil variables) and evolutionary history (i.e., phylogenetic relatedness among species and lineages) in driving global wood density variation. We found that wood density displayed a significant phylogenetic signal. Wood density differed among different biomes and climatic zones, with higher mean values of wood density in relatively drier regions (highest in subtropical desert). Our study revealed that at a global scale, for angiosperms and gymnosperms combined, phylogeny and species (representing the variance explained by taxonomy and not direct explained by long-term evolution process) explained 84.3% and 7.7% of total wood density variation, respectively, whereas current environment explained 2.7% of total wood density variation when phylogeny and species were taken into account. When angiosperms and gymnosperms were considered separately, the three proportions of explained variation are, respectively, 84.2%, 7.5% and 6.7% for angiosperms, and 45.7%, 21.3% and 18.6% for gymnosperms. Our study shows that evolutionary history outpaced current environmental factors in shaping global variation in wood density.
进化历史对木材密度变异的影响可能在塑造木材密度变异方面发挥重要作用,但这在很大程度上尚未得到验证。我们使用一个全面的全球数据集,其中包括来自全球2621个树种的27297次木材密度测量值,来检验进化历史遗产在驱动树种间木材密度变异方面发挥重要作用这一假设。我们评估了不同分类学(如被子植物和裸子植物)和生态(如热带、温带和寒带)树种组中的系统发育信号,探索了木材密度的生物地理和系统发育模式,并量化了当前环境因素(如气候和土壤变量)和进化历史(即物种和谱系间的系统发育相关性)在驱动全球木材密度变异中的相对重要性。我们发现木材密度显示出显著的系统发育信号。不同生物群落和气候带的木材密度不同,相对干燥地区的木材密度平均值较高(亚热带沙漠中最高)。我们的研究表明,在全球范围内,对于被子植物和裸子植物的总和而言,系统发育和物种(分别代表由分类学解释的变异,而非由长期进化过程直接解释的变异)分别解释了木材密度总变异的84.3%和7.7%,而在考虑系统发育和物种时,当前环境解释了木材密度总变异的2.7%。当分别考虑被子植物和裸子植物时,被子植物的三个解释变异比例分别为84.2%、7.5%和6.7%,裸子植物的分别为45.7%、21.3%和18.6%。我们的研究表明,在塑造全球木材密度变异方面,进化历史比当前环境因素的影响更大。