Identifying long-term stable refugia for relict plant species in East Asia

  • Cindy Q. Tang*
  • , Tetsuya Matsui
  • , Haruka Ohashi
  • , Yi Fei Dong
  • , Arata Momohara
  • , Sonia Herrando-Moraira
  • , Shenhua Qian
  • , Yongchuan Yang
  • , Masahiko Ohsawa
  • , Hong Truong Luu
  • , Paul J. Grote
  • , Pavel V. Krestov
  • , LePage Ben LePage
  • , Marinus Werger
  • , Kevin Robertson
  • , Carsten Hobohm
  • , Chong Yun Wang
  • , Ming Chun Peng
  • , Xi Chen
  • , Huan Chong Wang
  • Wen Hua Su, Rui Zhou, Shuaifeng Li, Long Yuan He, Kai Yan, Ming Yuan Zhu, Jun Hu, Ruo Han Yang, Wang Jun Li, Mizuki Tomita, Zhao Lu Wu, Hai Zhong Yan, Guang Fei Zhang, Hai He, Si Rong Yi, Hede Gong, Kun Song, Ding Song, Xiao Shuang Li, Zhi Ying Zhang, Peng Bin Han, Li Qin Shen, Diao Shun Huang, Kang Luo, Jordi López-Pujol
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

263 Scopus citations

Abstract

Today East Asia harbors many “relict” plant species whose ranges were much larger during the Paleogene-Neogene and earlier. The ecological and climatic conditions suitable for these relict species have not been identified. Here, we map the abundance and distribution patterns of relict species, showing high abundance in the humid subtropical/warm-temperate forest regions. We further use Ecological Niche Modeling to show that these patterns align with maps of climate refugia, and we predict species’ chances of persistence given the future climatic changes expected for East Asia. By 2070, potentially suitable areas with high richness of relict species will decrease, although the areas as a whole will probably expand. We identify areas in southwestern China and northern Vietnam as long-term climatically stable refugia likely to preserve ancient lineages, highlighting areas that could be prioritized for conservation of such species.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4488
JournalNature Communications
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2018

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