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Co-limitation toward lower latitudes shapes global forest diversity gradients

Abstract
The latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) is one of the most recognized global patterns of species richness exhibited across a wide range of taxa. Numerous hypotheses have been proposed in the past two centuries to explain LDG, but rigorous tests of the drivers of LDGs have been limited by a lack of high-quality global species richness data. Here we produce a high-resolution (0.025° × 0.025°) map of local tree species richness using a global forest [ver mas...]
The latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) is one of the most recognized global patterns of species richness exhibited across a wide range of taxa. Numerous hypotheses have been proposed in the past two centuries to explain LDG, but rigorous tests of the drivers of LDGs have been limited by a lack of high-quality global species richness data. Here we produce a high-resolution (0.025° × 0.025°) map of local tree species richness using a global forest inventory database with individual tree information and local biophysical characteristics from ~1.3 million sample plots. We then quantify drivers of local tree species richness patterns across latitudes. Generally, annual mean temperature was a dominant predictor of tree species richness, which is most consistent with the metabolic theory of biodiversity (MTB). However, MTB underestimated LDG in the tropics, where high species richness was also moderated by topographic, soil and anthropogenic factors operating at local scales. Given that local landscape variables operate synergistically with bioclimatic factors in shaping the global LDG pattern, we suggest that MTB be extended to account for co-limitation by subordinate drivers. [Cerrar]
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Author
liang, Jingjing;   Gamarra, Javier G.P.;   Picard, Nicolas;   Zhou, Mo;   Pijanowski, Bryan;   Jacobs, Douglass F.;   Reich, Peter B. ;   Crowther, Thomas W.;   Nabuurs , Gert-Jan;   de-Miguel, Sergio;   Peri, Pablo Luis;   Hui, Cang;  
Fuente
Nature Ecology and Evolution 6 : 1423-1437. (2022)
Date
2022-08-08
Editorial
Springer Nature
ISSN
2397-334X (online)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/13077
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-022-01831-x
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-022-01831-x
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Trees; Árboles; Tree and Stand Measurement; Cubicación de Arboles; Species Richness; Riqueza Específica; Databases; Bases de Datos; Continuous Forest Inventory; Inventario Forestal Permanente; Temperature; Temperatura; Anthropogenic Factors; Factores Antropogénicos; Aggregate Data; Datos Globales; Biophysical Characteristics; Características Biofísicas; Bioclimatic Factors; Factores Bioclimáticos; Metabolic Theory of Biodiversity; Teoría Metabólica de la Biodiversidad; Latitudinal Diversity Gradient; Gradiente de Diversidad Latitudinal;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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