IF: 3.9
CiteScore: 5.7
Editors-in-Chief
Yuanhe Yang
Bernhard Schmid
CN 10-1172/Q
ISSN 1752-9921(print)
ISSN 1752-993X(online)
  • Volume 19,Issue 1
    01 February 2026
      Perspective
      Research Article
      Huan Qi, Minglu Ji, Jiahui Ma, Linyu Qi, Qi Xu, Jingyuan Yang, Dong Wang, Mengzhou Liu, Yuan Miao, Xiongde Dong
      2026, 19 (1): rtaf126.
      Abstract ( 134 )   PDF(pc) (2007KB) ( 29 )   Save
      Forest fires are key ecological disturbances that influence vegetation dynamics and soil microbial processes central to carbon and nutrient cycling. While fire frequency and severity are increasing globally, the microbial mechanisms underlying ecosystem recovery remain inadequately understood. We used high-throughput amplicon sequencing to evaluate short-term effects of low- and high-severity fires on soil microbial diversity and co-occurrence networks following fire disturbance in a temperate forest. Fire severity had no significant impact on microbial α-diversity, but significantly altered β-diversity. Mantel tests indicated that soil pH and belowground biomass were the primary environmental drivers of bacterial and fungal community turnover under different fire severities. Further, network analyses revealed distinct microbial responses to fire severity: low-severity fire primarily restructured bacterial associations, whereas high-severity fire disrupted both bacterial and fungal networks. These findings suggest that microbial community structure and interactions are differentially sensitive to fire severity, with implications for soil functional resilience and ecosystem restoration strategies in fire-affected forests.
      Chenxin Miao, Jun Du, Wen Wang, Juanjuan Wu, Longqing Wu, Kehai Zhang, Xuee Ma, Heng Ren
      2026, 19 (1): rtaf124.
      Abstract ( 140 )   PDF(pc) (1505KB) ( 25 )   Save
      Environmental changes, especially climate variability, can substantially influence phenological patterns of plants and their associated insect communities, potentially reshaping the spatial distribution of their interactions. Despite considerable attention on species range shifts under climate change, empirical studies explicitly addressing how these shifts affect spatial matching between plants and their associated insect communities remain scarce. Here, we investigated inter-annual changes in the spatial matching between the poisonous weed Stellera chamaejasme L. and its associated floral visitor community along an altitudinal gradient over two climatically distinct growing seasons in the Qilian Mountains, China. We monitored the flowering phenology of S. chamaejasme and the abundance of its major pollinators (Meloidae, Tachinidae, Scarabaeidae and Noctuidae) at different altitudes. Our findings show a pronounced altitudinal displacement between the peak abundance zones of S. chamaejasme and its major pollinators, indicating spatial mismatches in both years (2021 and 2022). However, the increased preseason thermal accumulation in 2022 improved spatial matching, as high-density overlap zones shifted to higher altitudes, where insect visitation rates also increased. Additionally, the elevated preseason heat significantly advanced flowering phenology at high altitudes, which may contribute positively to breaking the altitudinal distribution limits of S. chamaejasme, along with enhanced spatial matching with pollinators. This study highlights the significant impact of inter-annual climate variability on spatial matching between mountain plants and pollinators at various altitudes, which is crucial for improving population dynamics models and enhancing the accuracy of predictions.
      Fangyuan Shen, Yuxi Jiang, Ning Liu, Lixue Yang
      2026, 19 (1): rtaf125.
      Abstract ( 108 )   PDF(pc) (2386KB) ( 16 )   Save
      Mixed cultivation of Larix gmelinii and Juglans mandshurica is a typical strategy for increasing stand productivity in Northeast China. However, the adaptive strategies of fine roots and root-associated fungi (RAF) after mixed cultivation remain unclear. Here, we examined the chemical, morphological and anatomical characteristics of fine roots, along with the composition, diversity and co-occurrence network structure of their RAF communities. Our results showed that mixed cultivation increased the root diameter and root tissue density of first-order to third-order fine roots for both L. gmelinii and J. mandshurica but decreased the specific root length. The root economic spectrum of the two species demonstrated a shift from a ‘do-it-yourself’ strategy to an ‘outsourcing’ strategy in their first- and second-order roots after mixed cultivation. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and endophytic fungi were the main fungal functional groups within the RAF of J. mandshurica, while ectomycorrhizal fungi were dominant in those of L. gmelinii. Mixed cultivation increased the RAF alpha diversity of J. mandshurica but decreased the RAF alpha diversity of L. gmelinii. Negative correlations in the co-occurrence networks of the RAF communities accounted for >50% of the two species, indicating that competitive relationships dominated within the RAF community. Changes in the composition of RAF after mixed cultivation effectively supported shifts in the root economic spectrum of the two species. The coordinated changes in fine root systems and their associated mycorrhizal fungi enable the two species to maintain their competitive edge in nutrient absorption when they are planted together.
      Feiyan Ren, Teng Wang, Chen Chen, Wanying Zong, Dafeng Hui, Zhipei Feng, Xitian Yang
      2026, 19 (1): rtaf127.
      Abstract ( 135 )   PDF(pc) (1182KB) ( 23 )   Save
      Leaf economic, hydraulic and anatomical traits play crucial roles in plant adaptation to diverse and variable environments. However, their relationships at the intraspecific level remain unclear. In this study, we investigated Quercus variabilis, a species spanning temperate to subtropical zones, to assess functional trait variation along a north-to-south environmental gradient in China (24°94′–40°26′ N). We analyzed 10 key functional traits, including leaf mass per area (LMA), leaf thickness (LT), leaf tissue density (LTD), leaf nitrogen concentration (LN), stomatal density (SD), vein density (VD), stomatal guard cell length (SL), palisade tissue thickness (PT), spongy tissue thickness (ST) and palisade-to-spongy tissue ratio (PT/ST) across 9 natural populations. The results showed that Q. variabilis exhibited significant plasticity in functional trait variation, primarily driven by environmental factors, with mean annual precipitation (MAP) and soil total nitrogen (STN) emerging as key ecological drivers promoting the coordinated variation in leaf functional traits. Coordinated relationships were observed between leaf economic traits (LMA, LT, LTD, LN) and hydraulic traits (SD, VD, SL), which varied in response to environmental conditions. Furthermore, leaf anatomical traits (PT, ST, PT/ST) were closely linked to both hydraulic and economic traits. These findings provide valuable insights into the adaptive strategies of Q. variabilis and enhance our understanding of plant responses to environmental change at the intraspecific level.
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    Plant community exhibits stochastic assembly pattern at early stage of vegetation restoration in heavily degraded alpine meadows on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau
    Yuanming Xiao, Juan Wang, Wenying Wang, Xiaoyun Wang, Xinyu Yang, Bo Fan, Guoying Zhou
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag004
    Abstract ( 8 )    PDF    Save
    Understanding the mechanisms governing plant community assembly is crucial for developing effective vegetation restoration and management strategies. However, studies examining plant community assembly during the restoration of severely degraded alpine meadows remain limited. In this study, we investigated the processes shaping plant community structure and the associated environmental drivers during the early stages of restoration in severely degraded alpine meadows. Our results showed that differences in plant community composition between mixed sowing and control treatments increased over time. Additionally, both species richness and the dominance of forb species originating from the soil seed bank progressively declined. Across all mixed sowing treatments, plant community assembly showed stochastic assembly patterns, with homogeneous dispersal increasing and ecological drift decreasing annually. By the third year of restoration, heterogeneous selection was more pronounced in the grass + legume mixture than in the grass-only and grass + legume + sedge mixture treatments. Further analyses identified under-canopy photosynthetically active radiation intensity and soil available phosphorus as the key environmental drivers of plant community composition. Therefore, we infer that the stochastic assembly observed after mixed sowing arises from the counterbalancing effects of environmental filtering and niche differentiation. This study highlights that reducing soil nutrient availability to limit the dominance of upper-layer plant communities is crucial for maintaining plant species diversity during the early stages of alpine meadow restoration. Overall, our findings provide valuable insights for improving vegetation restoration strategies in degraded alpine grasslands.
    Mycorrhizal strategy mediates anthropogenic impacts on plant range filling in China
    Yujun Yao, Xian Zhou, Junfeng Gao, Haoyuan Han, Yue Zhang, Keping Ma, Wubing Xu, Lei Chen
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag005
    Abstract ( 4 )    PDF    Save
    Mycorrhizal symbioses are critical for plant population and community dynamics, yet their role in mediating plant geographic spread under increasing anthropogenic pressure remains poorly understood. Here, we compiled geographic distribution and mycorrhizal information for 8,791 vascular plant species across China, and investigated how plant mycorrhizal strategies interact with human footprint to shape the extent to which species fill their potential ranges across species and space. We found that anthropogenic activities significantly affected range filling of arbuscular mycorrhizal plants, disproportionately reducing range filling of narrow-ranged species while benefiting widespread species. Conversely, range filling of ectomycorrhizal plants was primarily associated with abiotic environments. Our results suggest that mycorrhizal symbioses play a critical role in mediating plant responses to anthropogenic pressures across broad geographic scales and highlight the need to integrate plant-mycorrhizal interactions to predict biodiversity shifts in a changing environment.
    Effects of water-nitrogen interaction on resource use efficiency and adaptive strategies in the key growth period of Carex schmidtii
    Qiu-Ying Ma, Li Wu, Hai-Bo Jiang, Tao Yang, Hong-Feng Bian, Hai-Tao Wu, Chun-Guang He
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag006
    Abstract ( 5 )    PDF    Save
    Climate change and intensified agricultural activities are altering hydrological regimes and nitrogen inputs in wetland ecosystems, yet the mechanisms by which dominant wetland plants coordinate their responses to water-nitrogen interactions across growth stages remain insufficiently understood. This study investigated the dominant species, Carex schmidtii, utilizing a controlled experiment with three water levels (-10 cm, 0 cm and 10 cm) and three nitrogen additions (0, 60 and 120 kg N hm-2 a-1). Results revealed that C. schmidtii displayed pronounced stage-dependent plasticity to water-nitrogen interactions. Water availability emerged as the key factor determining growth and resource allocation, whereas nitrogen effects were strongly modulated by water conditions. During the vegetative growth stage, water limitation suppressed plant growth regardless of nitrogen addition, with plant height (ZG) in the WLN0 group decreased by 22.16% reltive to the W0N0, and this growth inhibition persisted even under high nitrogen inputs, indicating that nitrogen could not compensate for water deficiency. At low water level, water use efficiency (WUE) and nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) reached highest values and displayed positive correlation, indicating efficient resource utilization. During the reproductive growth stage, nitrogen played a stronger role in promoting structural developement and maintaining functional stability. Nitrogen additions alleviated NUE reduction under low water, whereas high water induced an escape response marked by reduced WUE (-29.10%) and elevated NUE (+119%). These findings highlight contrasting coordination strategies across growth stages and provide new insight into the adaptive mechanisms of dominant wetland plants under shifting hydrological and nutrient regimes.
    Microbes from local plants drive microbial assemble and promote plant growth of the invader Ageratina adenophora
    Zhao-Ying Zeng, Zi-Qing Liu, Ai-Ling Yang, Yu-Xuan Li, Yong-Lan Wang, Chao Zhao, Xiao-Han Jin, Tao Xu, Han-Bo Zhang
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag007
    Abstract ( 9 )    PDF    Save
    The role of local plant microbiome in affecting invasive plant growth remains unclear. We examined how aboveground and belowground microbes from 25 phylogenetically distinct local plants affect the growth and endophytic community assembly of the invasive Ageratina adenophora. We found that both the plant phylogenetics and the microbial community composition of local plants shaped endophytic community assembly in A. adenophora seedlings. Phylogenetic and physicochemical factors of the local plants did not explain their effects on growth of A. adenophora. Instead, growth was affected by both the microbial sources associated with local plants and the endophytes selectively enriched by A. adenophora. Aboveground microbes promoted A. adenophora growth more strongly than belowground soil microbes. On average, A. adenophora seedlings inoculated with aboveground tissues harbored a greater relative abundance of beneficial microbes and a lower relative abundance of detrimental microbes compared to those receiving soil inoculation. This study highlighted that the invasive A. adenophora can selectively recruit microbial communities from local plant microbiomes to enhance its growth.
    Spaceborne LiDAR reveals 3D structural differences between natural forests and tree plantations in China
    Hao Bai, Asadilla Yusup, Yanpei Guo, Kai Cheng, Xiuzhi Chen, Jing Liu, Shengli Tao
    doi: 10.1093/jpe/rtag008
    Abstract ( 6 )    PDF    Save
    Tree planting has been widely implemented worldwide to restore forest area and ecosystem services. While China has become the world’s largest country in terms of planted tree area, it remains unclear whether these tree plantations approximate the close-to-nature 3D structures that are critical for supporting ecosystem services. Using Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation (GEDI) data, in combination with linear mixed model analysis, this study for the first time provides a national-scale assessment of the difference in 3D structure between natural forests and tree plantations in China. We found that natural forests outperform tree plantations in canopy height (ΔRH98 = 0.58 m), foliage height diversity (ΔFHD = 0.06), plant area index (ΔPAI = 0.22), and canopy cover (ΔCover = 0.04). These differences vary across vegetation regions, with the largest ΔRH98, ΔPAI and ΔCover in the Warm Temperate Deciduous Broadleaf Forest Region, whereas the largest ΔFHD was found in the Cold Temperate Coniferous Forest Region. Linear mixed modeling further revealed that ΔPAI and ΔCover decreased under more favorable hydrothermal conditions. Our study revealed structural differences between China’s natural forests and tree plantations, highlighting the importance of selecting suitable sites with favorable environmental conditions for tree plantations and promoting close-to-nature management practice to support their ecosystem services.
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Special Issue

Editor’s Choice

Tracking forest overstory and understory phenology using a near-surface remote sensing system
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Ecological theory matters when linking plant functional traits and ecosystem carbon cycles
Erqian Cui
Effects of warming and grazing on resource allocation strategies in alpine grasslands of the Tibetan Plateau: A Meta-analysis
Guotai Zhang, Ga Zangjia, Ying Yang, Ci-ren Qu-zong, Yuan Zhang, Wei Mazhang, Cuo Se, Danzeng Quzhen, Jingting Mao, Chengwei Mu, Lan Wang, Shiping Wang, Zhiyong Yang, Tsechoe Dorji