The Importance of Energy Theory in Shaping Elevational Species Richness Patterns in Plants

Biology (Basel). 2022 May 26;11(6):819. doi: 10.3390/biology11060819.

Abstract

Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain elevational species richness patterns; however, evaluating their importance remains a challenge, as mountains that are nested within different biogeographic regions have different environmental attributes. Here, we conducted a comparative study for trees, shrubs, herbs, and ferns along the same elevational gradient for 22 mountains worldwide, examining the performance of hypotheses of energy, tolerance, climatic variability, and spatial area to explain the elevational species richness patterns for each plant group. Results show that for trees and shrubs, energy-related factors exhibit greater explanatory power than other factors, whereas the factors that are associated with climatic variability performed better in explaining the elevational species richness patterns of herbs and ferns. For colder mountains, energy-related factors emerged as the main drivers of woody species diversity, whereas in hotter and wetter ecosystems, temperature and precipitation were the most important predictors of species richness along elevational gradients. For herbs and ferns, the variation in species richness was less than that of woody species. These findings provide important evidence concerning the generality of the energy theory for explaining the elevational species richness pattern of plants, highlighting that the underlying mechanisms may change among different growth form groups and regions within which mountains are nested.

Keywords: elevational gradient; energy availability; global; multi-taxa; plant.

Grants and funding

This study was financed by the National Natural Science Funds of China (grant number 31800444), the GDAS Special Project of Science and Development (grant number 2021GDASYL-20210103005), and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant. We greatly appreciate the postdoctoral fellowship provided to Z.J. by the University of Quebec at Montreal (UQAM).