Data from: Phylogenetic diversity patterns in Himalayan forests reveal evidence for environmental filtering of distinct lineages
Large‐scale environmental gradients have been invaluable for unraveling the processes shaping the evolution and maintenance of biodiversity. Environmental gradients provide a natural setting to test theories about species diversity and distributions within a landscape with changing biotic and abioti...
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Zusammenfassung: | Large‐scale environmental gradients have been invaluable for unraveling
the processes shaping the evolution and maintenance of biodiversity.
Environmental gradients provide a natural setting to test theories about
species diversity and distributions within a landscape with changing
biotic and abiotic interactions. Elevational gradients are particularly
useful because they often encompass a large climatic range within a small
geographical extent. Here, we analyzed tree communities in plots located
throughout Arunachal Pradesh, a province in northeast India located on the
southern face of the Eastern Himalayas, representing one of the largest
elevational gradients in the world. Using indices of species and
phylogenetic diversity, we described shifts in community structure across
the landscape and explored the putative biotic and abiotic forces
influencing species assembly. As expected, species richness and
phylogenetic diversity decreased with increasing elevation; however,
contrary to predictions of environmental filtering, species relatedness
did not show any clear trend. Nonetheless, patterns of beta diversity
(both taxonomic and phylogenetic) strongly suggest lineage filtering along
the elevational gradient. Our results may be explained if filtering is
driving the assembly of species from distinct evolutionary lineages. New
metrics exploring community contributions to regional taxonomic and
phylogenetic beta diversity provided additional evidence for the
persistence of unique communities at high elevations. We suggest that
these patterns may be consistent with filtering on glacial relicts, part
of once more diverse clades with convergent traits suited to climates at
the last glacial maximum, resulting in random or over‐dispersed community
assemblages at high elevations. We propose that these high‐elevation sites
with evolutionarily distinct species represent possible regions for
conservation priority that may provide refugia for species threatened by
current warming trends. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1tr7p0k |