ABSTRACT AimStudies assessing large‐scale patterns of microbial diversity have predominantly focused on free‐living microorganisms, often failing to link observed patterns to established theories regarding the maintenance of global diversity patterns. We aimed to determine whether foliar fungi on two closely related grass hosts—Heteropogon contortusandThemeda triandra—display a commonly observed latitudinal gradient in species richness and determine whether host identity, energy (temperature and precipitation), climate seasonality, fire frequency and grass evolutionary history drive the observed patterns in species richness and composition. LocationPaleotropical. Time PeriodContemporary. Major Taxa StudiedFoliar fungi. MethodsFoliar fungal diversity was quantified from 201 leaf samples ofT. triandraandH. contortuscollected across the distributional range of these species. Mixed effects models were used to quantify patterns of diversity and their correlates among and within continents. Ordinations were used to assess drivers of composition. ResultsFoliar fungi displayed consistent latitudinal diversity gradients in richness. Energy was a strong driver of richness at inter‐continental and continental scales, while other factors had inconsistent impacts on richness among scales, hosts and guilds. Globally, richness was higher in regions of higher growing season temperatures and where hosts were present for longer periods. Composition was primarily structured by geographic region at the global scale, indicating that distance was a dominant driver of community composition. Within Australia, temperature and rainfall seasonality and the amount of growing season rainfall, were the dominant drivers of both richness and composition. Main ConclusionsWe find some support for the idea that foliar fungal species diversity is governed by the same factors as many macro‐organisms (energy availability and evolutionary history) at inter‐continental scales, but also that fungal diversity and composition in the highly seasonal continent of Australia were driven by factors that shape tropical grassy ecosystems, namely climate seasonality and fire.
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Environmental variables drive spatial patterns of trophic diversity in mammals
Abstract Understanding environmental drivers of species diversity has become increasingly important under climate change. Different trophic groups (predators, omnivores and herbivores) interact with their environments in fundamentally different ways and may therefore be influenced by different environmental drivers. Using random forest models, we identified drivers of terrestrial mammals' total and proportional species richness within trophic groups at a global scale. Precipitation seasonality was the most important predictor of richness for all trophic groups. Richness peaked at intermediate precipitation seasonality, indicating that moderate levels of environmental heterogeneity promote mammal richness. Gross primary production (GPP) was the most important correlate of the relative contribution of each trophic group to total species richness. The strong relationship with GPP demonstrates that basal‐level resource availability influences how diversity is structured among trophic groups. Our findings suggest that environmental characteristics that influence resource temporal variability and abundance are important predictors of terrestrial mammal richness at a global scale.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1932889
- PAR ID:
- 10519443
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Ecology Letters
- Volume:
- 26
- Issue:
- 11
- ISSN:
- 1461-023X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 1940 to 1950
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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