生物多样性 ›› 2023, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (12): 23392.  DOI: 10.17520/biods.2023392

• 华莱士诞辰200周年纪念专题 • 上一篇    下一篇

岛屿面积与气候共同影响舟山群岛种子植物丰富度格局

商晓凡1(), 张健1,*()(), 高浩杰2, 库伟鹏3, 毕玉科4, 李修鹏5, 阎恩荣1()   

  1. 1.华东师范大学生态与环境科学学院, 浙江天童森林生态系统国家野外科学观测研究站, 上海 200241
    2.浙江省舟山市林业科学研究院, 浙江舟山 316000
    3.杭州知森林业规划设计有限公司, 杭州 310000
    4.上海植物园, 上海 200231
    5.宁波市林场(宁波市林业技术服务中心), 浙江宁波 315040
  • 收稿日期:2023-10-18 接受日期:2023-12-14 出版日期:2023-12-20 发布日期:2023-12-16
  • 通讯作者: E-mail: jzhang@des.ecnu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金重点项目(32030068)

Island area and climate jointly impact seed plant richness patterns across the Zhoushan Archipelago

Shang Xiaofan1(), Zhang Jian1,*()(), Gao Haojie2, Ku Weipeng3, Bi Yuke4, Li Xiupeng5, Yan Enrong1()   

  1. 1 Zhejiang Tiantong Forest Ecosystem National Observation and Research Station, School of Ecological and Environmental Sciences, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200241
    2 Zhejiang Academy of Forestry, Zhoushan, Zhejiang 316000
    3 Hangzhou Zhisen Forestry Survey Planning and Design Company Limited, Hangzhou 310000
    4 Shanghai Botanical Garden, Shanghai 200231
    5 Ningbo Forestry Technology Service Center, Ningbo, Zhejiang 315040
  • Received:2023-10-18 Accepted:2023-12-14 Online:2023-12-20 Published:2023-12-16
  • Contact: E-mail: jzhang@des.ecnu.edu.cn

摘要:

岛屿因具有明确的地理边界, 是检验多个生态学过程如何构建生物多样性的理想平台之一。岛屿属性、气候因素、人类干扰等通过影响物种选择、扩散等过程, 进而影响着岛屿生物多样性格局。目前对于岛屿植物丰富度格局如何受这些因素的共同作用的认识仍不充分, 尤其是在人类干扰较强的海岛。本文基于我国第一大群岛舟山群岛92个岛屿较完整的种子植物分布数据, 采用一般线性回归和广义线性模型(伪泊松分布)定量评估岛屿属性(面积、隔离度、形状指数)、气候(温度、降水及其季节性)和人类干扰对本土植物总丰富度及不同生长型、叶物候型植物丰富度格局的影响, 采用beta回归分析常绿阔叶木本比率(常绿阔叶木本植物丰富度/所有阔叶木本植物丰富度)的影响因素。结果发现: 92个岛屿共记录本土植物1,158种, 其中乔木108种、灌木318种、草本732种; 岛屿面积是对植物总丰富度影响最大的因子, 其次是年降水量和隔离度; 乔木丰富度随隔离度增加而减少的趋势比灌木和草本更明显; 常绿阔叶和落叶阔叶木本植物丰富度格局与总体基本一致, 年降水量对常绿阔叶木本的影响大于落叶阔叶木本, 但常绿阔叶木本比率仅受温度季节性的强烈影响。岛屿面积、年降水量、温度季节性等是塑造舟山群岛所有植物及其不同功能型组(生长型、叶物候型)植物丰富度格局的主要决定因素。

关键词: 岛屿生物地理学, 宏生态学, 亚热带森林, 人类干扰, 功能生物地理学

Abstract

Aims: Islands are an ideal platform for investigating ecological processes that shape biodiversity assemblages because of their distinct boundaries. An island’s physical characteristics, climate, human impacts and other drivers shape an island’s biodiversity pattern by affecting species selection, dispersal and other processes. However, our knowledge around how such drivers concurrently affect island plant richness remains limited, especially on oceanic islands with strong human impacts.

Methods: We complied a comprehensive plant distribution database across 92 islands in the Zhoushan Archipelago, the largest archipelago in China. We then used general linear regression and generalized linear model (pseudo-Poisson distribution) to evaluate the effects of island’s physical characteristics (area, isolation and shape index), climate (temperature, precipitation and seasonality) and human impacts on the richness of native seed plants, and across different growth forms and leaf phenology types. We also used beta regression to evaluate the influence of environmental variables on the ratio of evergreen broad-leaved woody plant richness to all broad-leaved woody plant richness.

Results: In total, there were 1,158 seed plant species, including 108 tree species, 318 shrub species and 732 herbaceous species. The strongest driver of plant richness was island area, followed by isolation and annual precipitation. Tree richness decreased with increasing isolation, and this trend was most notable among trees than among shrubs and herbs. The richness of evergreen and deciduous broad-leaved woody plants was overall consistent with that of all plant richness. We found that annual precipitation had a stronger effect on evergreen broad-leaved woody than on deciduous, but the ratio of evergreen woody was only strongly affected by temperature seasonality.

Conclusion: We found that island area, annual precipitation, and temperature seasonality are the primary determinants in shaping the richness patterns of all plants and different functional groups (growth forms and leaf phenology types) across the 92 islands of China’s Zhoushan Archipelago.

Key words: island biogeography, macroecology, subtropical forest, human disturbance, functional biogeography