Anthropogenic disturbance driving population decline of a dominant tree in East Asia evergreen broadleaved forests over the last 11,000 years

Author:

Qin Sheng‐Yuan12,Zuo Zheng‐Yu12,Xu Shuang‐Xiu12,Liu Jie3,Yang Feng‐Mao23,Luo Ya‐Huang3,Ye Jun‐Wei14,Zhao Yao5,Rong Jun5,Liu Bing67,Ma Peng‐Fei1,Li De‐Zhu123

Affiliation:

1. Germplasm Bank of Wild Species, Kunming Institute of Botany Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming China

2. Kunming College of Life Science University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming China

3. CAS Key Laboratory for Plant Diversity and Biogeography of East Asia Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming China

4. Key Laboratory for Forest Resources Conservation and Utilization in the Southwest Mountains of China Ministry of Education, Southwest Forestry University Kunming China

5. Jiangxi Province Key Laboratory of Watershed Ecosystem Change and Biodiversity, Center for Watershed Ecology, Institute of Life Science and School of Life Sciences Nanchang University Nanchang China

6. State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

7. Sino‐African Joint Research Center Chinese Academy of Sciences Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractCurrent biodiversity loss is generally considered to have been caused by anthropogenic disturbance, but it is unclear when anthropogenic activities began to affect biodiversity loss. One hypothesis suggests it began with the Industrial Revolution, whereas others propose that anthropogenic disturbance has been associated with biodiversity decline since the early Holocene. To test these hypotheses, we examined the unique vegetation of evergreen broadleaved forests (EBLFs) in East Asia, where humans have affected landscapes since the early Holocene. We adopted a genomic approach to infer the demographic history of a dominant tree (Litsea elongata) of EBLFs. We used Holocene temperature and anthropogenic disturbance factors to calculate the correlation between these variables and the historical effective population size of L. elongata with Spearman statistics and integrated the maximum‐entropy niche model to determine the impact of climate change and anthropogenic disturbance on fluctuation in its effective population size. We identified 9 well‐defined geographic clades for the populations of L. elongata. Based on the estimated historical population sizes of these clades, all the populations contracted, indicating persistent population decline over the last 11,000 years. Demographic history of L. elongata and human population change, change in cropland use, and change in irrigated rice area were significantly negatively correlated, whereas climate change in the Holocene was not correlated with demographic history. Our results support the early human impact hypothesis and provide comprehensive evidence that early anthropogenic disturbance may contribute to the current biodiversity crisis in East Asia.

Funder

Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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