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Arbuscular mycorrhizal trees influence the latitudinal beta-diversity gradient of tree communities in forests worldwide

Authors :
Zhong, Yonglin
Chu, Chengjin
Myers, Jonathan A
Gilbert, Gregory S
Lutz, James A
Stillhard, Jonas
Zhu, Kai
Thompson, Jill
Baltzer, Jennifer L
He, Fangliang
LaManna, Joseph A
Davies, Stuart J
Aderson-Teixeira, Kristina J
Burslem, David FRP
Alonso, Alfonso
Chao, Kuo-Jung
Wang, Xugao
Gao, Lianming
Orwig, David A
Yin, Xue
Sui, Xinghua
Su, Zhiyao
Abiem, Iveren
Bissiengou, Pulchérie
Bourg, Norm
Butt, Nathalie
Cao, Min
Chang-Yang, Chia-Hao
Chao, Wei-Chun
Chapman, Hazel
Chen, Yu-Yun
Coomes, David A
Cordell, Susan
De Oliveira, Alexandre A
Du, Hu
Fang, Suqin
Giardina, Christian P
Hao, Zhanqing
Hector, Andrew
Hubbell, Stephen P
Janík, David
Jansen, Patrick A
Jiang, Mingxi
Jin, Guangze
Kenfack, David
Král, Kamil
Larson, Andrew J
Li, Buhang
Li, Xiankun
Li, Yide
Lian, Juyu
Lin, Luxiang
Liu, Feng
Liu, Yankun
Liu, Yu
Luan, Fuchen
Luo, Yahuang
Ma, Keping
Malhi, Yadvinder
McMahon, Sean M
McShea, William
Memiaghe, Hervé
Mi, Xiangcheng
Morecroft, Mike
Novotny, Vojtech
O'Brien, Michael J
Ouden, Jan Den
Parker, Geoffrey G
Qiao, Xiujuan
Ren, Haibao
Reynolds, Glen
Samonil, Pavel
Sang, Weiguo
Shen, Guochun
Shen, Zhiqiang
Song, Guo-Zhang Michael
Sun, I-Fang
Tang, Hui
Tian, Songyan
Uowolo, Amanda L
Uriarte, María
Wang, Bin
Wang, Xihua
Wang, Youshi
Weiblen, George D
Wu, Zhihong
Xi, Nianxun
Xiang, Wusheng
Xu, Han
Xu, Kun
Ye, Wanhui
Yu, Mingjian
Zeng, Fuping
Zhang, Minhua
Zhang, Yingming
Zhu, Li
Zimmerman, Jess K
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) and ectomycorrhizal (EcM) associations are critical for host-tree performance. However, how mycorrhizal associations correlate with the latitudinal tree beta-diversity remains untested. Using a global dataset of 45 forest plots representing 2,804,270 trees across 3840 species, we test how AM and EcM trees contribute to total beta-diversity and its components (turnover and nestedness) of all trees. We find AM rather than EcM trees predominantly contribute to decreasing total beta-diversity and turnover and increasing nestedness with increasing latitude, probably because wide distributions of EcM trees do not generate strong compositional differences among localities. Environmental variables, especially temperature and precipitation, are strongly correlated with beta-diversity patterns for both AM trees and all trees rather than EcM trees. Results support our hypotheses that latitudinal beta-diversity patterns and environmental effects on these patterns are highly dependent on mycorrhizal types. Our findings highlight the importance of AM-dominated forests for conserving global forest biodiversity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3f1a6e541efb329f8a437fa043277c7a