Himalayan Habitats Reveal the Shifting Balance of Evolution’s Forces
A comprehensive study across 482 Himalayan sites reveals how environmental stress fundamentally reshapes the mechanisms of plant community assembly. Researchers analyzed 13 functional traits related to resource use and stress tolerance across six distinct habitats, from saline marshes to alpine tundra. The findings demonstrate a clear spectrum: in the most extreme environments, strong abiotic filtering drives trait convergence, a hallmark of environmental selection. In contrast, in less stressful habitats like shrublands and steppes, the signature shifts to trait divergence, indicating increased importance of niche differentiation and competition. Crucially, the study integrated phylogenetic data, showing that convergent traits often arose independently in distantly related lineages, providing robust evidence for adaptive evolution under intense selective pressures.
Study Significance: This research provides a powerful, empirical framework for predicting how biodiversity and ecosystem function will reorganize as climate change alters abiotic filters. For evolutionary biologists, it offers a real-world model of how selective pressure varies across a gradient, directly influencing the balance between convergent and divergent evolution. Understanding these assembly rules is critical for forecasting adaptive radiation potential and the evolutionary trajectories of species in rapidly changing mountain ecosystems.
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