β-diversity in temperate grasslands is driven by stronger environmental filtering of plant species with large genomes

Hai Yang Zhang, L. T. Xiao-Tao, Cun Zheng Wei, Jeff R. Powell, Xiao Bo Wang, Ding Liang Xing, Zhu Wen Xu, Huan Long Li, Xing Guo Han

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Elucidating mechanisms underlying community assembly and biodiversity patterns is central to ecology and evolution. Genome size (GS) has long been hypothesized to potentially affect species' capacity to tolerate environmental stress and might therefore help drive community assembly. However, its role in driving β-diversity (i.e., spatial variability in species composition) remains unclear. We measured GS for 161 plant species and community composition across 52 sites spanning a 3200-km transect in the temperate grasslands of China. By correlating the turnover of species composition with environmental dissimilarity, we found that resource filtering (i.e., environmental dissimilarity that includes precipitation, and soil nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations) affected β-diversity patterns of large-GS species more than small-GS species. By contrast, geographical distance explained more variation of β-diversity for small-GS than for large-GS species. In a 10-year experiment manipulating levels of water, nitrogen, and phosphorus, adding resources increased plant biomass in species with large GS, suggesting that large-GS species are more sensitive to the changes in resource availability. These findings highlight the role of GS in driving community assembly and predicting species responses to global change.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere3941
JournalEcology
Volume104
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2023

Keywords

  • biodiversity conservation
  • community assembly
  • dispersal
  • genome size diversity
  • nutrient addition
  • species distribution

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