Data from: Phylogenetic conservatism in plant phenology
Phenological events – defined points in the life cycle of a plant or animal – have been regarded as highly plastic traits, reflecting flexible responses to various environmental cues. The ability of a species to track, via shifts in phenological events, the abiotic environment through time might dic...
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Zusammenfassung: | Phenological events – defined points in the life cycle of a plant or
animal – have been regarded as highly plastic traits, reflecting flexible
responses to various environmental cues. The ability of a species to
track, via shifts in phenological events, the abiotic environment through
time might dictate its vulnerability to future climate change.
Understanding the predictors and drivers of phenological change is
therefore critical. Here, we evaluated evidence for phylogenetic
conservatism – the tendency for closely related species to share similar
ecological and biological attributes – in phenological traits across
flowering plants. We aggregated published and unpublished data on timing
of first flower and first leaf, encompassing ˜4000 species at 23 sites
across the Northern Hemisphere. We reconstructed the phylogeny for the set
of included species, first, using the software program Phylomatic, and
second, from DNA data. We then quantified phylogenetic conservatism in
plant phenology within and across sites. We show that more closely related
species tend to flower and leaf at similar times. By contrasting mean
flowering times within and across sites, however, we illustrate that it is
not the time of year that is conserved, but rather the phenological
responses to a common set of abiotic cues. Our findings suggest that
species cannot be treated as statistically independent when modelling
phenological responses. Synthesis. Closely related species tend to
resemble each other in the timing of their life-history events, a likely
product of evolutionarily conserved responses to environmental cues. The
search for the underlying drivers of phenology must therefore account for
species' shared evolutionary histories. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.td03p886 |