4.5 Article

Phylogenetic niche conservatism in C4 grasses

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 170, Issue 3, Pages 835-845

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-012-2337-5

Keywords

Phylogenetic niche conservatism; C-3/C-4 photosynthesis; Poaceae; Morphology; Habitat

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Funding

  1. UK/China Excellence Scholarship from the China Scholarship Council
  2. Department for Business, Innovation and Skills

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Photosynthetic pathway is used widely to discriminate plant functional types in studies of global change. However, independent evolutionary lineages of C-4 grasses with different variants of C-4 photosynthesis show different biogeographical relationships with mean annual precipitation, suggesting phylogenetic niche conservatism (PNC). To investigate how phylogeny and photosynthetic type differentiate C-4 grasses, we compiled a dataset of morphological and habitat information of 185 genera belonging to two monophyletic subfamilies, Chloridoideae and Panicoideae, which together account for 90 % of the world's C-4 grass species. We evaluated evolutionary variance and covariance of morphological and habitat traits. Strong phylogenetic signals were found in both morphological and habitat traits, arising mainly from the divergence of the two subfamilies. Genera in Chloridoideae had significantly smaller culm heights, leaf widths, 1,000-seed weights and stomata; they also appeared more in dry, open or saline habitats than those of Panicoideae. Controlling for phylogenetic structure showed significant covariation among morphological traits, supporting the hypothesis of phylogenetically independent scaling effects. However, associations between morphological and habitat traits showed limited phylogenetic covariance. Subfamily was a better explanation than photosynthetic type for the variance in most morphological traits. Morphology, habitat water availability, shading, and productivity are therefore all involved in the PNC of C-4 grass lineages. This study emphasized the importance of phylogenetic history in the ecology and biogeography of C-4 grasses, suggesting that divergent lineages need to be considered to fully understand the impacts of global change on plant distributions.

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