Abstract

Mountains are considered excellent natural laboratories for studying the determinants of plant diversity at contrasting spatial scales. To gain insights into how plant diversity is structured at different spatial scales, we surveyed high mountain plant communities in the Chilean Andes where man-driven perturbations are rare. This was done along elevational gradients located at different latitudes taking into account factors that act at fine scales, including abiotic (potential solar radiation and soil quality) and biotic (species interactions) factors, and considering multiple spatial scales. Species richness, inverse of Simpson’s concentration (Dequiv), beta-diversity and plant cover were estimated using the percentage of cover per species recorded in 34 sites in the different regions with contrasted climates. Overall, plant species richness, Dequiv and plant cover were lower in sites located at higher latitudes. We found a unimodal relationship between species richness and elevation and this pattern was constant independently of the regional climatic conditions. Soil quality decreased the beta-diversity among the plots in each massif and increased the richness, the Dequiv and cover. Segregated patterns of species co-occurrence were related to increases in richness, Dequiv and plant cover at finer scales. Our results showed that elevation patterns of alpine plant diversity remained constant along the regions although the mechanisms underlying these diversity patterns may differ among climatic regions. They also suggested that the patterns of plant diversity in alpine ecosystems respond to a series of factors (abiotic and biotic) that act jointly at different spatial scale determining the assemblages of local communities, but their importance can only be assessed using a multi-scale spatial approach.

Highlights

  • We recorded a total of 234 perennial plant species in the 34 plots sampled in the three regions, with a total of 86, 86, and 118 species in the Farellones, Maule, and Torres del Paine, respectively

  • In the sub-Antarctic region, the community was dominated by prostrate shrubs such as Empetrum rubrum at low elevations, whereas the higher zones were dominated by the cushion plant Azorella monantha

  • Our findings showed that the patterns of plant diversity in alpine ecosystems as hypothesized respond to a series of factors that act at different spatial scale, i.e. climatic variation related to latitude, local variations in elevation and fine scale species interactions

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Summary

Introduction

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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