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  • Plant evolutionary history mainly explains the variance in biomass responses to climate warming at a global scale

    Author(s)
    Shao, Junjiong
    Yuan, Tengfei
    Li, Zhen
    Li, Nan
    Liu, Huiying
    Bai, Shahla Hosseini
    Xia, Jianyang
    Lu, Meng
    Zhou, Xuhui
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Hosseini-Bai, Shahla
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Evolutionary history shapes the interspecific relatedness and intraspecific variation, which has a profound influence on plant functional traits and productivity. However, it is far from clear how the phylogenetic relatedness among species and intraspecific variation could contribute to the observed variance in plant biomass responses to climate warming. We compiled a dataset with 284 species from warming experiments to explore the relative importance of phylogenetic, intraspecific, experimental and ecological factors to warming effects on plant biomass, using phylogenetic eigenvector regression and variance decomposition. ...
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    Evolutionary history shapes the interspecific relatedness and intraspecific variation, which has a profound influence on plant functional traits and productivity. However, it is far from clear how the phylogenetic relatedness among species and intraspecific variation could contribute to the observed variance in plant biomass responses to climate warming. We compiled a dataset with 284 species from warming experiments to explore the relative importance of phylogenetic, intraspecific, experimental and ecological factors to warming effects on plant biomass, using phylogenetic eigenvector regression and variance decomposition. Our results showed that phylogenetic relatedness could account for about half the total variance in biomass responses to warming, which were correlated with leaf economic traits at the family level but not at species level. The intraspecific variation contributed to approximately one-third of the variance, whereas the experimental design and ecological characteristics only explained 7–17%. These results suggest that intrinsic factors (evolutionary history) play more important roles than extrinsic factors (experimental treatment and environment) in determining the responses of plant biomass to warming at the global scale. This highlights the urgent need for land surface models to include evolutionary aspects in predicting ecosystem functions under climate change.
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    Journal Title
    New Phytologist
    Volume
    222
    Issue
    3
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.15695
    Subject
    Biological sciences
    Agricultural, veterinary and food sciences
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/385564
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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