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Environmental drivers of herbaceous plant diversity in the understory community of a warm-temperate forest

Tingting Deng, Qin Du, Yan Zhu, Simon A. Queenborough

2025Plant Diversity19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Herbaceous plants are an essential component of forest diversity and driver of ecosystem processes. However, because the growth forms and life-history strategies of herbaceous plants differ from those of woody plants, it is unclear whether the mechanisms that drive patterns plant diversity and community structure in these two plant groups are the same. In this study, we determined whether herb and woody plant communities have similar patterns and drivers of alpha- and beta-diversity. We compared species richness, distribution, and abundance of herbs to woody seedlings in a 20-ha Donglingshan warm-temperate forest (Donglingshan FDP), China. We also determined whether variation in patterns of species richness and composition are better explained by environmental or spatial variables. Herbaceous plants accounted for 72% of all species (81 herbaceous, 31 woody) recorded. Alpha- and beta-diversity were higher in herbs than in woody seedlings. Although alpha-diversity of herbs and woody seedlings was not correlated across the site, the local-site contributions to beta-diversity for herbs and woody seedlings were negatively correlated. Habitat type explained slightly more variation in herb community composition than in woody seedling composition, with the highest diversity in the low-elevation slope. Environmental variables explained the variation in species richness and composition more in herbaceous plants than in woody seedlings. Our results indicate that different mechanisms drive variation in the herb and woody seedling communities, with herbs exhibiting greater environmental sensitivity and habitat dependence. These findings contribute to the better understanding of herbaceous plant diversity and composition in forest communities. • This manuscript addresses a fundamental lack of knowledge of how herbaceous plant communities are structured in forests, especially compared to the trees. • We found convincing evidence of different and incongruent patterns of diversity between herbs and woody seedlings, with a much greater role for the environment in driving that. • Dispersal limitation and/or habitat partitioning have a greater impact on herbs than on trees, implying that different plant growth forms require different management strategies.

Topics & Concepts

Herbaceous plantUnderstoryDiversity (politics)Temperate climatePlant diversityAgroforestryGeographyTemperate forestPlant communityTemperate rainforestEcologyBiodiversityEnvironmental scienceBiologySpecies richnessEcosystemCanopyPolitical scienceLawEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesPlant and animal studiesRangeland and Wildlife Management
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