Energy determines broad pattern of plant distribution in Western Himalaya

Ecology and Evolution
Rajendra M PandaChandrashekhar Biradar

Abstract

Several factors describe the broad pattern of diversity in plant species distribution. We explore these determinants of species richness in Western Himalayas using high-resolution species data available for the area to energy, water, physiography and anthropogenic disturbance. The floral data involves 1279 species from 1178 spatial locations and 738 sample plots of a national database. We evaluated their correlation with 8-environmental variables, selected on the basis of correlation coefficients and principal component loadings, using both linear (structural equation model) and nonlinear (generalised additive model) techniques. There were 645 genera and 176 families including 815 herbs, 213 shrubs, 190 trees, and 61 lianas. The nonlinear model explained the maximum deviance of 67.4% and showed the dominant contribution of climate on species richness with a 59% share. Energy variables (potential evapotranspiration and temperature seasonality) explained the deviance better than did water variables (aridity index and precipitation of the driest quarter). Temperature seasonality had the maximum impact on the species richness. The structural equation model confirmed the results of the nonlinear model but less efficiently. The mutua...Continue Reading

References

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Datasets Mentioned

BETA
GMTED2010

Methods Mentioned

BETA
PCA
GAM

Software Mentioned

RStudio
Worldclim
ArcGIS
SEM
ape
GAM
mgcv
corrplot

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