| Literature DB >> 28084416 |
Shunli Yu1, Ofir Katz2,3, Weiwei Fang1, Danfeng Li1, Weiguo Sang1,4, Canran Liu5.
Abstract
Plant communities differ in their fruit type spectra, especially in the proportions of fleshy and non-fleshy fruit types. However, which abiotic and biotic factors drive this variability along elevation gradient and what drives the evolution of fruit type diversity still are puzzling. We analyzed the variations in proportions and richness of fleshy-fruited species and their correlations to various abiotic and biotic variables along elevation gradients in three mountains in the Beijing region, northeast China. Fleshy-fruited species, which are characterized by high fruit water contents, were found in great proportion and richness at relatively low elevations, where soil water content is low compared to high elevations. High temperatures in low elevations increase water availability for plants. Plants that grow in the shaded low-elevation thick-canopy forests are less exposed to evapotranspiration and thus possess water surpluses that can be invested in fleshy fruits. Such an investment in fleshy fruits is beneficial for these species because it makes the fruits more attractive to frugivores that act as seed dispersers in the close-canopied environments, where dispersion by wind is less effective. A hypothesis is proposed that plant internal water surpluses are the prerequisite conditions that permit evolution of fleshy fruits to occur.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28084416 PMCID: PMC5233997 DOI: 10.1038/srep40417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Relationships between elevation and proportions of species with fleshy fruits for each mountain separately ((a) Donglingshan, (b) Haituoshan, (c) Baihuashan) and for the entire study area (d). Solid lines represent the best fit model for each mountain.
Selected models for the three mountains and pooled data.
| Intercept | Elevation | Elevation2 | NG | PD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donglingshan | |||||
| md12 | −0.8029** | −6.080 × 10(−7)*** | |||
| md8 | 0.5174 ns | −0.0018*** | |||
| Haituoshan | |||||
| Md4 | −25.26 ns | 0.0031* | −9.901 × 10(−6)* | ||
| Md12 | 1.71** | −1.206 × 10(−6)*** | |||
| Md8 | 5.3871*** | −0.0042*** | |||
| Baihuashan | |||||
| md4 | −19.86*** | −0.0261*** | −9.281 × 10(−6)*** | ||
| md3 | −20.36*** | 0.0290*** | −1.032 × 10(−5)*** | −2.521 × 10(−4)ns | |
| md2 | −20.18*** | −0.0279*** | −9.919 × 10(−6)*** | −0.033 ns | |
| Entire region | |||||
| md2 | −9.821*** | 0.0135*** | −4.949 × 10(−6)*** | −0.0350** | |
| md3 | −9.377*** | 0.0133*** | −4.909 × 10(−6)*** | −2.112 × 10(−4)** | |
Note: ***p < 0.01; **p < 0.05; *p < 0.1; nsp ≥ 0.1.
Results of regression analysis on species richness of different growth forms with fleshy fruits along altitudinal gradient.
| Sites | Growth forms | F values | P values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Donglingshan mountain | Woody species | 21.638 | 0.003 |
| Herb | 18.700 | 0.005 | |
| Liana | 8.149 | 0.029 | |
| Haituoshan mountain | Woody species | 37.882 | 0.009 |
| Herb | 7.972 | 0.067 | |
| Liana | 1.530 | 0.304 | |
| Baihuashan mountain | Woody species | 2.965 | 0.129 |
| Herb | 1.799 | 0.222 | |
| Liana | 1.683 | 0.236 |
Figure 2Soil temperature (a) and moisture (b) at 5 cm and 10 cm below ground as well as air temperature (c) (measured by HOBO weather station data recorder, Onset Company, USA) from April to September 2011. Similar patterns were observed in 2012.
Variables included in each model.
| Model | Elevation | Elevation2 | NF | NG | PD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| md1 | yes | yes | yes | ||
| md2 | yes | yes | yes | ||
| md3 | yes | yes | yes | ||
| md4 | yes | yes | |||
| md5 | yes | yes | |||
| md6 | yes | yes | |||
| md7 | yes | yes | |||
| md8 | yes | ||||
| md9 | yes | yes | |||
| md10 | yes | yes | |||
| md11 | yes | yes | |||
| md12 | yes |