Journal of Plant Ecology

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Environmental variables shape the deviation of phylogenetic relatedness between terrestrial and aquatic herbaceous angiosperms across China

Yangyang Liua, Hong Qianb, Yadong Zhoua,*   

  1. aSchool of Life Sciences, Nanchang University, Nanchang 330031, Jiangxi, PR China
    bResearch and Collections Center, Illinois State Museum, Springfield, Illinois, USA

    Correspondence
    E‐mail: Yadong Zhou (ydzhou@ncu.edu.cn)
  • Supported by:
    This study was supported by the National Science Foundation of China (32260046) and the Thousand Talents Program of Jiangxi Province (jxsq2023101079).

Abstract: Compared to terrestrial plants whose diversity is more directly influenced by climate, aquatic plant diversity is considered to be more dependent on water environments. Therefore, it could be predicted that the phylogenetic relatedness of terrestrial plants is more susceptible to climate filtering than that of aquatic plants. We compiled a comprehensive distribution dataset of herbaceous angiosperms in China, including both terrestrial and aquatic species. We compared the phylogenetic relatedness and its environmental correlation of the two groups, using the standardized effect size of phylogenetic diversity (PDses) and the standardized effect size of mean phylogenetic distance (MPDses), which reflect shallow and deep evolutionary histories, respectively. We also use the deviation of PDses (ΔPDses) and MPDses (ΔMPDses) between terrestrial and aquatic plants to reflect differences in the phylogenetic relatedness between terrestrial and aquatic plants. Our results showed that the geographical patterns of PDses and MPDses between aquatic and terrestrial plants are roughly consistent. ΔPDses and ΔMPDses between terrestrial and aquatic plants vary across the geographical scale and environmental gradient. Environmental variables (current climate, historical climate change, and topography) explained more of the variation in PDses and MPDses of terrestrial plants than that of aquatic plants, with current climate explaining more of ΔPDses and ΔMPDses between terrestrial and aquatic plants. Our results reveal the differential impacts of large-scale environmental factors on the phylogenetic relatedness of terrestrial versus aquatic plant communities, providing a new perspective for understanding the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of these two distinct plant assemblages.

Key words: terrestrial, aquatic, phylogenetic relatedness, deviation, environmental variables, China