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Species packing and the latitudinal gradient in beta-diversity
Author(s) -
Ke Cao,
Richard Condit,
Xiangcheng Mi,
Lei Chen,
Haibao Ren,
Wubing Xu,
David F. R. P. Burslem,
Chunrong Cai,
Min Cao,
LiWan Chang,
Chengjin Chu,
Fuxin Cui,
Hu Du,
Sisira Ediriweera,
C. S. V. Gunatilleke,
I. U. A. N. Gunatilleke,
Zhanqing Hao,
Guangze Jin,
Jinbo Li,
Buhang Li,
Yide Li,
Yankun Liu,
Hongwei Ni,
Michael J. O’Brien,
Xiujuan Qiao,
Guochun Shen,
Songyan Tian,
Xihua Wang,
Han Xu,
Yaozhan Xu,
Libing Yang,
Sandra Yap,
Juyu Lian,
Wanhui Ye,
Mingjian Yu,
ShengHsin Su,
ChiaHao ChangYang,
Yili Guo,
Xiankun Li,
Fuping Zeng,
Daoguang Zhu,
Li Zhu,
IFang Sun,
Keping Ma,
JensChristian Svenning
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2020.3045
Subject(s) - species richness , beta diversity , gamma diversity , ecology , alpha diversity , niche , species diversity , diversity (politics) , environmental gradient , biodiversity , temperate climate , biology , habitat , sociology , anthropology
The decline in species richness at higher latitudes is among the most fundamental patterns in ecology. Whether changes in species composition across space (beta-diversity) contribute to this gradient of overall species richness (gamma-diversity) remains hotly debated. Previous studies that failed to resolve the issue suffered from a well-known tendency for small samples in areas with high gamma-diversity to have inflated measures of beta-diversity. Here, we provide a novel analytical test, using beta-diversity metrics that correct the gamma-diversity and sampling biases, to compare beta-diversity and species packing across a latitudinal gradient in tree species richness of 21 large forest plots along a large environmental gradient in East Asia. We demonstrate that after accounting for topography and correcting the gamma-diversity bias, tropical forests still have higher beta-diversity than temperate analogues. This suggests that beta-diversity contributes to the latitudinal species richness gradient as a component of gamma-diversity. Moreover, both niche specialization and niche marginality (a measure of niche spacing along an environmental gradient) also increase towards the equator, after controlling for the effect of topographical heterogeneity. This supports the joint importance of tighter species packing and larger niche space in tropical forests while also demonstrating the importance of local processes in controlling beta-diversity.

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