-
Autor
Abiem, Iveren 1 Alonso, Alfonso 1 Anderson-Teixeira, Kristina J 1 Baltzer, Jennifer L 1 Bourg, Norm 1 Burslem, David F R P 1 Cao, Min 1 Chapman, Hazel 1 Chu, Chengjin 1 Condit, Richard 1 Fang, Suqin 1 Fischer, Gunter A 1 Gao, Lianming 1 Hao, Zhanqin 1 Hau, Billy C H 1 He, Fangliang 1 He, Qing 1 Hector, Andrew 1 Hubbell, Stephen P 1 Jiang, Mingxi 1
-
Pracoviště
Biology Department Wilfrid Laurier Universit... 1 Center for Conservation and Sustainability S... 1 Center for Ecological Research Northeast For... 1 Center for Theoretical Study Charles Univers... 1 Center for Tropical Forest Science Forest Gl... 1 College of Forestry South China Agricultural... 1 Conservation Ecology Center Smithsonian Cons... 1 Conservation Ecology Center Smithsonian Cons... 1 Conservation Ecology Center Smithsonian Cons... 1 Departamento Ecologia Universidade de São Pa... 1 Department of Biology and Tyson Research Cen... 1 Department of Ecology State Key Laboratory o... 1 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biolo... 1 Department of Environmental Studies Universi... 1 Department of Forest Ecology Silva Tarouca R... 1 Department of Natural Resources and Environm... 1 Department of Plant Science and Technology U... 1 Department of Plant Sciences University of O... 1 Department of Plant and Microbial Biology Un... 1 ECNU Alberta Joint Lab for Biodiversity Stud... 1
- Formát
- Publikační typ
- Kategorie
- Jazyk
- Země
- Časopis/zdroj
- Vlastník
PubMed
30548766
DOI
10.1111/ele.13175
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
Climate is widely recognised as an important determinant of the latitudinal diversity gradient. However, most existing studies make no distinction between direct and indirect effects of climate, which substantially hinders our understanding of how climate constrains biodiversity globally. Using data from 35 large forest plots, we test hypothesised relationships amongst climate, topography, forest structural attributes (stem abundance, tree size variation and stand basal area) and tree species richness to better understand drivers of latitudinal tree diversity patterns. Climate influences tree richness both directly, with more species in warm, moist, aseasonal climates and indirectly, with more species at higher stem abundance. These results imply direct limitation of species diversity by climatic stress and more rapid (co-)evolution and narrower niche partitioning in warm climates. They also support the idea that increased numbers of individuals associated with high primary productivity are partitioned to support a greater number of species.
Sdílet
Název dokumentu
Po ukončení testovacího provozu bude odkaz přesměrován adresu produkční verze portálu Medvik.