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Different sets of traits explain abundance and distribution patterns of European plants at different spatial scales

Jandt, Ute; Sporbert, Maria; Welk, Erik; Seidler, Gunnar; A?i?, Svetlana; Biurrun, Idoia; Campos, Juan Antonio; ?arni, Andra�; Cerabolini, Bruno E.L.; Chytr�, Milan; ?u�terevska, Renata; Dengler, J�rgen; De Sanctis, Michele; Dziuba, Tetiana; Fag�ndez, Jaime; Field, Richard; Golub, Valentin; He, Tianhua; Jansen, Florian; Lenoir, Jonathan; Marcen�, Corrado; Mart�n?For�s, Irene; Moeslund, Jesper Erenskjold; Moretti, Marco; Niinemets, �lo; Penuelas, Josep; P�rez?Haase, Aaron; Vandvik, Vigdis; Vassilev, Kiril; Vynokurov, Denys; Bruelheide, Helge

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Authors

Ute Jandt

Maria Sporbert

Erik Welk

Gunnar Seidler

Svetlana A?i?

Idoia Biurrun

Juan Antonio Campos

Andra� ?arni

Bruno E.L. Cerabolini

Milan Chytr�

Renata ?u�terevska

J�rgen Dengler

Michele De Sanctis

Tetiana Dziuba

Jaime Fag�ndez

Valentin Golub

Tianhua He

Florian Jansen

Jonathan Lenoir

Corrado Marcen�

Irene Mart�n?For�s

Jesper Erenskjold Moeslund

Marco Moretti

�lo Niinemets

Josep Penuelas

Aaron P�rez?Haase

Vigdis Vandvik

Kiril Vassilev

Denys Vynokurov

Helge Bruelheide



Contributors

Holger Kreft
Editor

Abstract

Aim: Plant functional traits summarize the main variability in plant form and function across taxa and biomes. We assess whether geographic range size, climatic niche size, and local abundance of plants can be predicted by sets of traits (trait syndromes) or are driven by single traits. Location: Eurasia. Methods: Species distribution maps were extracted from the Chorological Database Halle to derive information on the geographic range size and climatic niche size for 456 herbaceous, dwarf shrub and shrub species. We estimated local species abundances based on 740,113 vegetation plots from the European Vegetation Archive, where abundances were available as plant species cover per plot. We compiled a complete species-by-trait matrix of 20 plant functional traits from trait databases (TRY, BiolFlor and CLO-PLA). The relationships of species’ geographic range size, climatic niche size and local abundance with single traits and trait syndromes were tested with multiple linear regression models. Results: Generally, traits were more strongly related to local abundances than to broad-scale species distribution patterns in geographic and climatic space (range and niche size), but both were better predicted by trait combinations than by single traits. Local abundance increased with leaf area and specific leaf area (SLA). Geographic range size and climatic niche size both increased with SLA. While range size increased with plant height, niche size decreased with leaf carbon content. Conclusion: Functional traits matter for species’ abundance and distribution at both local and broad geographic scale. Local abundances are associated with different combinations of traits as compared to broad-scale distributions, pointing to filtering by different environmental and ecological factors acting at distinct spatial scales. However, traits related to the leaf economics spectrum were important for species’ abundance and occurrence at both spatial scales. This finding emphasizes the general importance of resource acquisition strategies for the abundance and distribution of herbaceous, dwarf shrub and shrub species.

Citation

Jandt, U., Sporbert, M., Welk, E., Seidler, G., Aćić, S., Biurrun, I., Campos, J. A., Čarni, A., Cerabolini, B. E., Chytrý, M., Ćušterevska, R., Dengler, J., De Sanctis, M., Dziuba, T., Fagúndez, J., Field, R., Golub, V., He, T., Jansen, F., Lenoir, J., …Bruelheide, H. (2021). Different sets of traits explain abundance and distribution patterns of European plants at different spatial scales. Journal of Vegetation Science, 32(2), Article e13016. https://doi.org/10.1111/jvs.13016

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 11, 2021
Online Publication Date Mar 18, 2021
Publication Date Apr 29, 2021
Deposit Date Apr 30, 2021
Publicly Available Date May 4, 2021
Journal Journal of Vegetation Science
Print ISSN 1100-9233
Electronic ISSN 1654-1103
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 32
Issue 2
Article Number e13016
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/jvs.13016
Keywords Plant Science; Ecology
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/5503582
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jvs.13016

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