Sunday, April 12, 2026

 

Scientists reveal how regional species pools shape tree diversity and rarity in subtropical and tropical forests




KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
Typical forest landscapes of subtropical and tropical regions in china, and the distribution map of the forest plots used in this study. 

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Typical forest landscapes of subtropical and tropical regions in china, and the distribution map of the forest plots used in this study.

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Credit: Jian Zhang





Why do some natural forests hold so many different kinds of rare trees? It's a question that has long puzzled and intrigued ecologists. While early studies focused on local environmental conditions, scientists now know that broader regional forces, like historical climates and species dispersal, also shape local forest diversity.

In new research published in the KeAi journal Plant Diversity, an international research team led by Dr. Jian Zhang from Sun Yat-sen University explored what drives tree diversity and rarity in China's subtropical and tropical forests—some of the most biodiverse forests on Earth at the same latitudes.

Using a large database (VAST-China) of 3,923 forest plots covering 3,307 tree species, the team defined the regional species pool as all the species that could potentially occur in a given area. They then quantified how regional and local factors together determine species richness (how many species live there) and rarity (how uncommon they are).

"We found that the size of the regional species pool is the strongest driver of local tree diversity," shares Zhang. "Forests with larger species pools, supported by favorable climates, varied habitats, and stable historical climates, have far more species locally."

In particular, warmth, complex topography, and steady paleoclimates help species accumulate over time at regional scales, boosting both total diversity and the number of rare trees.

"Large species pools support both high diversity and many rare species," explains lead author Dr. Houjuan Song from Shanxi Agricultural University. "Rare trees thrive where regional species pools are rich and human pressure is low. This tells us we must prioritize rare and endemic species protection in highly damaged and fragmented forests."

"To preserve forest diversity and save rare and endemic species as the accelerating environment changes, we need to protect the areas with large species pools and minimize human disturbance, especially in biodiversity hotspots," Zhang adds.

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Contact the author: Jian Zhang, zhangjian6@mail.sysu.edu.cn

The publisher KeAi was established by Elsevier and China Science Publishing & Media Ltd to unfold quality research globally. In 2013, our focus shifted to open access publishing. We now proudly publish more than 200 world-class, open access, English language journals, spanning all scientific disciplines. Many of these are titles we publish in partnership with prestigious societies and academic institutions, such as the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).

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