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Abstract Elevation gradients are frequently treated as useful space‐for‐time substitutions for inferring trait variations in response to different environmental conditions. The independent variations in leaf traits in response to elevation are well understood, but far less is known about trait covariation and its controls. This limits our understanding of the principles and mechanisms of leaf trait covariation, especially along elevation gradients in subtropical forests. Here, we studied the covariation among seven functional traits, including leaf size (LS), leaf nitrogen per unit mass ( N mass ), leaf nitrogen per unit area ( N area ), leaf mass per area (LMA), leaf dry matter content (LDMC), leaf thickness (LT) and the leaf internal‐to‐ambient CO 2 ratio ( C i : C a , termed χ ). Sampling was conducted on 41 species in a subtropical forest on Mount Huangshan, China, and the data were analyzed using multivariate analysis and variance partitioning procedures. We found that (a) The first three principal components captured 79% of the total leaf trait covariation, which was caused mainly by within site differences; (b) N mass and LDMC were positively correlated with soil water content (SW) and negatively correlated with vapor pressure deficit (VPD), while χ showed negative relationships with elevation; and (c) 78% of the variation in the studied plant functional traits could be explained by climate, soil, and family controls in combination, while family distribution was the most important determining factor for trait covariation along the elevation gradient. Our findings provide relevant insights into plant adaptation to environmental gradients and present useful guidelines for ecosystem management and planning. , Plain Language Summary Changes of plant functional traits along elevation gradient are important indicators which reflect the behaviors and adaptations of plants. In this study we first analyzed the dominant signals of seven leaf functional traits and then we depicted the response of seven traits to changing elevation environments, and finally we quantified the contributions of climate, soil, and vegetation distribution. Our findings validate the hypothesis that trait covariation, and thus adaptation, occurs in response to the elevation gradients that most plant species experience. , Key Points The first three principal components captured 79% of the total leaf trait covariation Leaf nitrogen content ( N mass ) and leaf dry mass content (LDMC) were positively correlated with soil water content and negatively correlated with vapor pressure deficit Vegetation (family) distribution was the most important determining factor for trait covariation along the elevation gradient
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Summary Plant functional ecology requires the quantification of trait variation and its controls. Field measurements on 483 species at 48 sites across China were used to analyse variation in leaf traits, and assess their predictability. Principal components analysis ( PCA ) was used to characterize trait variation, redundancy analysis ( RDA ) to reveal climate effects, and RDA with variance partitioning to estimate separate and overlapping effects of site, climate, life‐form and family membership. Four orthogonal dimensions of total trait variation were identified: leaf area ( LA ), internal‐to‐ambient CO 2 ratio (χ), leaf economics spectrum traits (specific leaf area ( SLA ) versus leaf dry matter content ( LDMC ) and nitrogen per area ( N area )), and photosynthetic capacities ( V cmax , J max at 25°C). LA and χ covaried with moisture index. Site, climate, life form and family together explained 70% of trait variance. Families accounted for 17%, and climate and families together 29%. LDMC and SLA showed the largest family effects. Independent life‐form effects were small. Climate influences trait variation in part by selection for different life forms and families. Trait values derived from climate data via RDA showed substantial predictive power for trait values in the available global data sets. Systematic trait data collection across all climates and biomes is still necessary.
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A trait-based approach is an effective way to quantify plant adaptation strategies in response to changing environments. Single trait variations have been well depicted before; however, multi-trait covariations and their roles in shaping plant adaptation strategies along aridity gradients remain unclear. The purpose of this study was to reveal multi-trait covariation characteristics, their controls and their relevance to plant adaptation strategies. Using eight relevant plant functional traits and multivariate statistical approaches, we found the following: (1) the eight studied traits show evident covariation characteristics and could be grouped into four functional dimensions linked to plant strategies, namely energy balance, resource acquisition, resource investment and water use efficiency; (2) leaf area (LA) together with traits related to the leaf economic spectrum, including leaf nitrogen content per area (Narea), leaf nitrogen per mass (Nmass) and leaf dry mass per area (LMA), covaried along the aridity gradient (represented by the moisture index, MI) and dominated the trait–environmental change axis; (3) together, climate, soil and family can explain 50.4% of trait covariations; thus, vegetation succession along the aridity gradient cannot be neglected in trait covariations. Our findings provide novel perspectives toward a better understanding of plant adaptations to arid conditions and serve as a reference for vegetation restoration and management programs in arid regions.
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Abstract Increasing evidence indicates that current dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) have suffered from insufficient realism and are difficult to improve, particularly because they are built on plant functional type (PFT) schemes. Therefore, new approaches, such as plant trait-based methods, are urgently needed to replace PFT schemes when predicting the distribution of vegetation and investigating vegetation sensitivity. As an important direction towards constructing next-generation DGVMs based on plant functional traits, we propose a novel approach for modelling vegetation distributions and analysing vegetation sensitivity through trait-climate relationships in China. The results demonstrated that a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) trained with a LMA-N mass -LAI data combination yielded an accuracy of 72.82% in simulating vegetation distribution, providing more detailed parameter information regarding community structures and ecosystem functions. The new approach also performed well in analyses of vegetation sensitivity to different climatic scenarios. Although the trait-climate relationship is not the only candidate useful for predicting vegetation distributions and analysing climatic sensitivity, it sheds new light on the development of next-generation trait-based DGVMs.
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Abstract Both anthropogenic activities and climate change can affect the biogeochemical processes of natural wetland methanogenesis. Quantifying possible impacts of changing climate and wetland area on wetland methane (CH 4 ) emissions in China is important for improving our knowledge on CH 4 budgets locally and globally. However, their respective and combined effects are uncertain. We incorporated changes in wetland area derived from remote sensing into a dynamic CH 4 model to quantify the human and climate change induced contributions to natural wetland CH 4 emissions in China over the past three decades. Here we found that human-induced wetland loss contributed 34.3% to the CH 4 emissions reduction (0.92 TgCH 4 ), and climate change contributed 20.4% to the CH 4 emissions increase (0.31 TgCH 4 ), suggesting that decreasing CH 4 emissions due to human-induced wetland reductions has offset the increasing climate-driven CH 4 emissions. With climate change only, temperature was a dominant controlling factor for wetland CH 4 emissions in the northeast (high latitude) and Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (high altitude) regions, whereas precipitation had a considerable influence in relative arid north China. The inevitable uncertainties caused by the asynchronous for different regions or periods due to inter-annual or seasonal variations among remote sensing images should be considered in the wetland CH 4 emissions estimation.
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Abstract Methane (CH 4 ) emissions from tropical wetlands contribute 60%–80% of global natural wetland CH 4 emissions. Decreased wetland CH 4 emissions can act as a negative feedback mechanism for future climate warming and vice versa. The impact of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on CH 4 emissions from wetlands remains poorly quantified at both regional and global scales, and El Niño events are expected to become more severe based on climate models’ projections. We use a process‐based model of global wetland CH 4 emissions to investigate the impacts of the ENSO on CH 4 emissions in tropical wetlands for the period from 1950 to 2012. The results show that CH 4 emissions from tropical wetlands respond strongly to repeated ENSO events, with negative anomalies occurring during El Niño periods and with positive anomalies occurring during La Niña periods. An approximately 8‐month time lag was detected between tropical wetland CH 4 emissions and ENSO events, which was caused by the combined time lag effects of ENSO events on precipitation and temperature over tropical wetlands. The ENSO can explain 49% of interannual variations for tropical wetland CH 4 emissions. Furthermore, relative to neutral years, changes in temperature have much stronger effects on tropical wetland CH 4 emissions than the changes in precipitation during ENSO periods. The occurrence of several El Niño events contributed to a lower decadal mean growth rate in atmospheric CH 4 concentrations throughout the 1980s and 1990s and to stable atmospheric CH 4 concentrations from 1999 to 2006, resulting in negative feedback to global warming.