Aims Deserts are one of the ecosystems most sensitive to global climate change.However,there are few studies examining how changing abiotic and biotic factors under climate change will affect plant species diversity i...Aims Deserts are one of the ecosystems most sensitive to global climate change.However,there are few studies examining how changing abiotic and biotic factors under climate change will affect plant species diversity in the temperate deserts of Asia.This study aimed to:(i)characterize species distributions and diversity patterns in an Asian temperate desert;and(ii)to quantify the effects of spatial and environment variables on plant species diversity.Methods We surveyed 61 sites to examine the relationship between plant species diversity and several spatial/environmental variables in the Gurbantunggut Desert.Spatial and environmental variables were used to predict plant species diversity in separate multiple regression and ordination models.Variation in species responses to spatial and environmental conditions was partitioned by combining these variables in a redundancy analysis(RDA)and by creating multivariate regression trees(MRT).Important Findings We found 92 plant species across the 61 sites.Elevation and geographic location were the dominant environmental factors underlying variation in site species richness.A RDA indicated that 93%of the variance in the species–environment relationships was explained by altitude,latitude,longitude,precipitation and slope position.Precipitation and topographic heterogeneity,through their effects on water availability,were more important than soil chemistry in determining the distribution of species.MRT analyses categorized communities into four groups based on latitude,soil pH and elevation,explaining 42.3%of the standardized species variance.Soil pH strongly influenced community composition within homogeneous geographic areas.Our findings suggest that precipitation and topographic heterogeneity,rather than edaphic heterogeneity,are more closely correlated to the number of species and their distributions in the temperate desert.展开更多
基金Natural Science Foundation of ChinaXinjiang(U1130304)the National Science Foundation of China(41061004 and 31260099).
文摘Aims Deserts are one of the ecosystems most sensitive to global climate change.However,there are few studies examining how changing abiotic and biotic factors under climate change will affect plant species diversity in the temperate deserts of Asia.This study aimed to:(i)characterize species distributions and diversity patterns in an Asian temperate desert;and(ii)to quantify the effects of spatial and environment variables on plant species diversity.Methods We surveyed 61 sites to examine the relationship between plant species diversity and several spatial/environmental variables in the Gurbantunggut Desert.Spatial and environmental variables were used to predict plant species diversity in separate multiple regression and ordination models.Variation in species responses to spatial and environmental conditions was partitioned by combining these variables in a redundancy analysis(RDA)and by creating multivariate regression trees(MRT).Important Findings We found 92 plant species across the 61 sites.Elevation and geographic location were the dominant environmental factors underlying variation in site species richness.A RDA indicated that 93%of the variance in the species–environment relationships was explained by altitude,latitude,longitude,precipitation and slope position.Precipitation and topographic heterogeneity,through their effects on water availability,were more important than soil chemistry in determining the distribution of species.MRT analyses categorized communities into four groups based on latitude,soil pH and elevation,explaining 42.3%of the standardized species variance.Soil pH strongly influenced community composition within homogeneous geographic areas.Our findings suggest that precipitation and topographic heterogeneity,rather than edaphic heterogeneity,are more closely correlated to the number of species and their distributions in the temperate desert.
基金supported by the Key Knowledge Innovation Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(Grant Nos.KZCX3-SW-343-3&KZCX3-SW-326-4)the Natural Science Foundation of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region(Grant No.200421128)the Project of 0asis Person with Ability in Xinjiang.