TY - JOUR
T1 - Different mechanisms underlie similar species-area relationships in two tropical archipelagoes
AU - Li, Shengchun
AU - Tu, Tieyao
AU - Li, Shaopeng
AU - Yang, Xian
AU - Zheng, Yong
AU - Guo, Liang Dong
AU - Zhang, Dianxiang
AU - Jiang, Lin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Despite much research in the field of island biogeography, mechanisms regulating insular diversity remain elusive. Here, we aim to explore mechanisms underlying plant species-area relationships in two tropical archipelagoes in the South China Sea. We found positive plant species-area relationships for both coral and continental archipelagoes. However, our results showed that different mechanisms contributed to similar plant species-area relationships between the two archipelagoes. For coral islands, soil nutrients and spatial distance among communities played major roles in shaping plant community structure and species diversity. By contrast, the direct effect of island area, and to a lesser extent, soil nutrients determined plant species richness on continental islands. Intriguingly, increasing soil nutrients availability (N, P, K) had opposite effects on plant diversity between the two archipelagoes. In summary, the habitat quality effect and dispersal limitation are important for regulating plant diversity on coral islands, whereas the passive sampling effect, and to a lesser extent, the habitat quality effect are important for regulating plant diversity on continental islands. More generally, our findings indicate that island plant species-area relationships are outcomes of the interplay of both niche and neutral processes, but the driving mechanisms behind these relationships depends on the type of islands.
AB - Despite much research in the field of island biogeography, mechanisms regulating insular diversity remain elusive. Here, we aim to explore mechanisms underlying plant species-area relationships in two tropical archipelagoes in the South China Sea. We found positive plant species-area relationships for both coral and continental archipelagoes. However, our results showed that different mechanisms contributed to similar plant species-area relationships between the two archipelagoes. For coral islands, soil nutrients and spatial distance among communities played major roles in shaping plant community structure and species diversity. By contrast, the direct effect of island area, and to a lesser extent, soil nutrients determined plant species richness on continental islands. Intriguingly, increasing soil nutrients availability (N, P, K) had opposite effects on plant diversity between the two archipelagoes. In summary, the habitat quality effect and dispersal limitation are important for regulating plant diversity on coral islands, whereas the passive sampling effect, and to a lesser extent, the habitat quality effect are important for regulating plant diversity on continental islands. More generally, our findings indicate that island plant species-area relationships are outcomes of the interplay of both niche and neutral processes, but the driving mechanisms behind these relationships depends on the type of islands.
KW - Coral and continental islands
KW - Plant diversity
KW - Soil nutrients
KW - Species-area relationships
KW - The sampling effect
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85174720285
U2 - 10.1016/j.pld.2023.08.006
DO - 10.1016/j.pld.2023.08.006
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85174720285
SN - 2096-2703
VL - 46
SP - 238
EP - 246
JO - Plant Diversity
JF - Plant Diversity
IS - 2
ER -