Alpine, but not montane, seed plants constitute a biogeographically and
climatically distinct species pool across the Americas.
Abstract
Aim Higher elevation habitats contribute substantially to global
biodiversity. Nevertheless, we know comparatively little about how
diversity patterns differ among alpine and montane communities across
different mountain ranges. Here, we characterized the realized niche
space of American seed plants to ask whether or not montane or alpine
community compositions define climatically distinct species pools at
this regional scale. Location Americas. Time Period Contemporary. Major
taxa studied Seed plants. Methods We assembled a niche model dataset of
72,372 American seed plants based on digitized and georeferenced
specimen records. We used this dataset to quantify occupied abiotic
niche space with regards to temperature, precipitation, and elevation.
This approach further permitted differentiation of higher-elevation
specialists (i.e., ranges centered at high elevations) from generalists
(i.e., ranges centered at lower elevations but extending into mountain
areas). Results Montane communities did not differ from the regional
species pool in terms of richness patterns, occupied climatic niche
space, or niche breadth. In contrast, alpine communities were
characterized by a bimodal latitudinal diversity gradient, drastically
reduced climatic niche space, and broader temperature but narrower
precipitation niche breadth. Alpine generalists further showed
statistically significant differences in temperature, but not
precipitation, niche breadth from both alpine specialists and lowland
taxa. We also highlight non-alpine species whose climatic niche space
otherwise overlapped with that of alpine plants. These species were
geographically concentrated in the southern US and Mexico, tended to
have a greater fraction of their ranges in frost-exposed mountain
foothills, and less of their range in lowland, frost-free, areas,
compared to other non-alpine species. Main conclusions These results
suggest that ecological and physiological barriers, rather than
dispersal limitation might better explain alpine community assembly and
that alpine, but not montane, communities form a climatically distinct
species pool in the Americas.