Evolutionary history and global angiosperm species richness–climate relationships

Author:

Jiang Ke1ORCID,Wang Qinggang12ORCID,Dimitrov Dimitar3ORCID,Luo Ao1ORCID,Xu Xiaoting14,Su Xiangyan15,Liu Yunpeng1,Li Yaoqi16ORCID,Li Yichao1,Wang Zhiheng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ecology, Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes of Ministry of Education, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

2. Department of Ecological Science & Engineering, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory of Biodiversity and Organic Farming of Beijing City China Agricultural University Beijing China

3. Department of Natural History University Museum of Bergen, University of Bergen Bergen Norway

4. Key Laboratory of Bio‐Resource and Eco‐Environment of Ministry of Education, College of Life Sciences Sichuan University Chengdu China

5. Land Consolidation and Rehabilitation Center, Ministry of Natural Resources Beijing China

6. Department of Health and Environmental Sciences Xi'an Jiaotong‐Liverpool University Suzhou China

Abstract

AbstractAimClimate has been regarded as an important explanation for large‐scale species richness patterns. However, the mechanisms underlying the significant variations in species richness–climate relationships across different clades remain to be tested. We explored how niche conservatism, diversification rates and time for speciation influenced species richness–climate relationships between clades.LocationThe globe.Time PeriodPresent day.Major Taxa StudiedAngiosperms.MethodsBased on a newly complied database of the global distributions of 288,735 angiosperm species, we used generalized linear models to assess the relationships between species richness of different angiosperm families and climatic factors. We also conducted phylogenetic comparative analysis to test whether niche conservatism, diversification rates and time for speciation affect the variations in species richness–climate relationships.ResultsWe found that temperature seasonality dominated the global angiosperm diversity patterns. Closely related families had more similar species richness–climate relationships than distantly related ones. The discrepancy between the current and ancestral niches of different clades had much stronger effects on variations in species richness–climate relationships than diversification rates and time for speciation. With the increase in the discrepancy between current and ancestral niches, the explanatory power (i.e.,R2) of contemporary temperature and precipitation in explaining species richness patterns increased.Main ConclusionsOverall, our findings strongly support that niche conservatism dominates the variations in species richness–climate relationships across taxonomic groups. These findings allow better understanding on how large‐scale species diversity patterns are formed.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change

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