Abstract
Understory vegetation hosts high biodiversity and plays a critical role in the ecosystem processes of boreal forests. However, the drivers of understory plant diversity in this high-latitude ecosystem remain uncertain. To investigate the influences of forest type and latitude on understory beta diversity at different scales, we quantified the species composition of Vaccinium uliginosum Linnaeus communities under broadleaf and coniferous forests at two latitudes at the quadrat (2 × 2 m) and plot (10 × 10 m) scales in the Greater Xing’an Mountains, NE China. At the quadrat scale, species alpha diversity of V. uliginosum communities was higher in broadleaf forests than that in coniferous forests at both latitudes. The differences in species beta diversity (the Sørensen’s dissimilarity) in two forest types depended on the latitude: beta diversity in broadleaf forests was higher than that in coniferous forests at the higher latitude, while beta diversity in coniferous forests was higher at the lower latitude. At the plot scale, alpha and beta diversity of V. uliginosum communities decreased from broadleaf forests to coniferous forests at the higher latitude, and they did not show significant differences between forest types at the lower latitude. These results indicate the interactive effects of forest type and latitude on beta diversity of understory vegetation. Moreover, the influences of forest type and latitude on species alpha and beta diversity were different across the two spatial scales, suggesting that the assembly mechanisms underlying species diversity may be different at different scales. Understanding the maintenance of understory vegetation diversity will benefit the conservation and management of boreal forests.
Highlights
The determinants of species diversity in nature as well as its ecological consequences are fundamental and critical questions in ecology [1]
The differences in understory plant beta diversity between coniferous and broadleaf forests depended on latitudes
In the boreal forests, we investigated the effects of forest type and latitude on beta diversity of understory V. uliginosum communities at two spatial scales
Summary
The determinants of species diversity in nature as well as its ecological consequences are fundamental and critical questions in ecology [1]. Species diversity can be partitioned into alpha, beta, and gamma components [2]. From alpha diversity, which is the diversity in species within communities, beta diversity is the compositional differences/turnover between communities [3,4]. Species beta diversity can be used to infer ecological processes that determine community assembly [6,7,8,9]. Despite these many significances, beta diversity has been relatively much less studied than alpha diversity. A large number of researchers have studied the roles of environment and space in driving species beta diversity [8,12,13,14]
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