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Tree diversity,tree height and environmental harshness in eastern and western North America
Authors:Christian O. Marks  Helene C. Muller‐Landau  David Tilman
Affiliation:1. The Nature Conservancys, Northampton, MA, USA;2. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, Panama;3. Department of Ecology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN, USA
Abstract:Does variation in environmental harshness explain local and regional species diversity gradients? We hypothesise that for a given life form like trees, greater harshness leads to a smaller range of traits that are viable and thereby also to lower species diversity. On the basis of a strong dependence of maximum tree height on site productivity and other measures of site quality, we propose maximum tree height as an inverse measure of environmental harshness for trees. Our results show that tree species richness is strongly positively correlated with maximum tree height across multiple spatial scales in forests of both eastern and western North America. Maximum tree height co‐varied with species richness along gradients from benign to harsh environmental conditions, which supports the hypothesis that harshness may be a general mechanism limiting local diversity and explaining diversity gradients within a biogeographic region.
Keywords:Alpha diversity  diversity gradients  environmental favourability  gamma diversity  harshness hypothesis  maximum tree height  site index  tree species richness
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