TY - JOUR
T1 - Foundation species across a latitudinal gradient in China
AU - Qiao, Xiujuan
AU - Zhang, Jiaxin
AU - Wang, Zhong
AU - Xu, Yaozhan
AU - Zhou, Tianyang
AU - Mi, Xiangcheng
AU - Cao, Min
AU - Ye, Wanhui
AU - Jin, Guangze
AU - Hao, Zhanqing
AU - Wang, Xugao
AU - Wang, Xihua
AU - Tian, Songyan
AU - Li, Xiankun
AU - Xiang, Wusheng
AU - Liu, Yankun
AU - Shao, Yingnan
AU - Xu, Kun
AU - Sang, Weiguo
AU - Zeng,, Fuping
AU - Ren, Haibao
AU - Jiang, Mingxi
AU - Ellison, Aaron M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the Ecological Society of America
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - Foundation species structure forest communities and ecosystems but are difficult to identify without long-term observations or experiments. We used statistical criteria––outliers from size-frequency distributions and scale-dependent negative effects on alpha diversity and positive effects on beta diversity––to identify candidate foundation woody plant species in 12 large forest-dynamics plots spanning 26 degrees of latitude in China. We used these data (1) to identify candidate foundation species in Chinese forests, (2) to test the hypothesis––based on observations of a midlatitude peak in functional trait diversity and high local species richness but few numerically dominant species in tropical forests––that foundation woody plant species are more frequent in temperate than tropical or boreal forests, and (3) to compare these results with data from the Americas to suggest candidate foundation genera in northern hemisphere forests. Using the most stringent criteria, only two species of Acer, the canopy tree Acer ukurunduense and the shrubby treelet Acer barbinerve, were identified in temperate plots as candidate foundation species. Using more relaxed criteria, we identified four times more candidate foundation species in temperate plots (including species of Acer, Pinus, Juglans, Padus, Tilia, Fraxinus, Prunus, Taxus, Ulmus, and Corlyus) than in (sub)tropical plots (the treelets or shrubs Aporosa yunnanensis, Ficus hispida, Brassaiopsis glomerulata, and Orophea laui). Species diversity of co-occurring woody species was negatively associated with basal area of candidate foundation species more frequently at 5- and 10-m spatial grains (scale) than at a 20-m grain. Conversely, Bray-Curtis dissimilarity was positively associated with basal area of candidate foundation species more frequently at 5-m than at 10- or 20-m grains. Both stringent and relaxed criteria supported the hypothesis that foundation species are more common in mid-latitude temperate forests. Comparisons of candidate foundation species in Chinese and North American forests suggest that Acer be investigated further as a foundation tree genus.
AB - Foundation species structure forest communities and ecosystems but are difficult to identify without long-term observations or experiments. We used statistical criteria––outliers from size-frequency distributions and scale-dependent negative effects on alpha diversity and positive effects on beta diversity––to identify candidate foundation woody plant species in 12 large forest-dynamics plots spanning 26 degrees of latitude in China. We used these data (1) to identify candidate foundation species in Chinese forests, (2) to test the hypothesis––based on observations of a midlatitude peak in functional trait diversity and high local species richness but few numerically dominant species in tropical forests––that foundation woody plant species are more frequent in temperate than tropical or boreal forests, and (3) to compare these results with data from the Americas to suggest candidate foundation genera in northern hemisphere forests. Using the most stringent criteria, only two species of Acer, the canopy tree Acer ukurunduense and the shrubby treelet Acer barbinerve, were identified in temperate plots as candidate foundation species. Using more relaxed criteria, we identified four times more candidate foundation species in temperate plots (including species of Acer, Pinus, Juglans, Padus, Tilia, Fraxinus, Prunus, Taxus, Ulmus, and Corlyus) than in (sub)tropical plots (the treelets or shrubs Aporosa yunnanensis, Ficus hispida, Brassaiopsis glomerulata, and Orophea laui). Species diversity of co-occurring woody species was negatively associated with basal area of candidate foundation species more frequently at 5- and 10-m spatial grains (scale) than at a 20-m grain. Conversely, Bray-Curtis dissimilarity was positively associated with basal area of candidate foundation species more frequently at 5-m than at 10- or 20-m grains. Both stringent and relaxed criteria supported the hypothesis that foundation species are more common in mid-latitude temperate forests. Comparisons of candidate foundation species in Chinese and North American forests suggest that Acer be investigated further as a foundation tree genus.
KW - beta diversity
KW - biodiversity
KW - CForBio
KW - China
KW - codispersion analysis
KW - forest-dynamics plots
KW - ForestGEO
KW - latitudinal gradient
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096893794&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ecy.3234
DO - 10.1002/ecy.3234
M3 - 文章
C2 - 33107020
AN - SCOPUS:85096893794
SN - 0012-9658
VL - 102
JO - Ecology
JF - Ecology
IS - 2
M1 - e03234
ER -