科研成果 by Type: 期刊论文

2016
Miraldo A, Li S, Borregaard MK, Flórez-Rodríguez A, Gopalakrishnan S, Rizvanovic M, Wang Z, Rahbek C, Marske KA, Nogués-Bravo D. An Anthropocene map of genetic diversity. ScienceScience. 2016;353:1532-1535.Abstract
The Anthropocene is witnessing a loss of biodiversity, with well-documented declines in the diversity of ecosystems and species. For intraspecific genetic diversity, however, we lack even basic knowledge on its global distribution. We georeferenced 92,801 mitochondrial sequences for >4500 species of terrestrial mammals and amphibians, and found that genetic diversity is 27% higher in the tropics than in nontropical regions. Overall, habitats that are more affected by humans hold less genetic diversity than wilder regions, although results for mammals are sensitive to choice of genetic locus. Our study associates geographic coordinates with publicly available genetic sequences at a massive scale, yielding an opportunity to investigate both the drivers of this component of biodiversity and the genetic consequences of the anthropogenic modification of nature.%U http://science.sciencemag.org/content/sci/353/6307/1532.full.pdf
Shrestha N, Shrestha S, Koju L, Shrestha KK, Wang Z. Medicinal plant diversity and traditional healing practices in eastern Nepal. Journal of EthnopharmacologyJournal of Ethnopharmacology. 2016;192:292-301.
Song G, Zhang R, Qu Y, Wang Z, Dong L, Kristin A, Alström P, Ericson PGP, Lambert DM, Fjeldså J, et al. A zoogeographical boundary between the Palaearctic and Sino-Japanese realms documented by consistent north/south phylogeographical divergences in three woodland birds in eastern China. Journal of BiogeographyJournal of Biogeography. 2016;43:2099-2112.
Sonne J, Martín González AM, Maruyama PK, Sandel B, Vizentin-Bugoni J, Schleuning M, Abrahamczyk S, Alarcón R, Araujo AC, Araújo FP, et al. High proportion of smaller ranged hummingbird species coincides with ecological specialization across the Americas. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences. 2016;283:20152512.Abstract
Ecological communities that experience stable climate conditions have been speculated to preserve more specialized interspecific associations and have higher proportions of smaller ranged species (SRS). Thus, areas with disproportionally large numbers of SRS are expected to coincide geographically with a high degree of community-level ecological specialization, but this suggestion remains poorly supported with empirical evidence. Here, we analysed data for hummingbird resource specialization, range size, contemporary climate, and Late Quaternary climate stability for 46 hummingbird–plant mutualistic networks distributed across the Americas, representing 130 hummingbird species (ca 40% of all hummingbird species). We demonstrate a positive relationship between the proportion of SRS of hummingbirds and community-level specialization, i.e. the division of the floral niche among coexisting hummingbird species. This relationship remained strong even when accounting for climate, furthermore, the effect of SRS on specialization was far stronger than the effect of specialization on SRS, suggesting that climate largely influences specialization through species' range-size dynamics. Irrespective of the exact mechanism involved, our results indicate that communities consisting of higher proportions of SRS may be vulnerable to disturbance not only because of their small geographical ranges, but also because of their high degree of specialization.
Tao S, Guo Q, Li C, Wang Z, Fang J. Global patterns and determinants of forest canopy height. EcologyEcology. 2016;97:3265-3270.
Xu X, Wang Z, Rahbek C, Sanders N, Fang J. Geographical variation in the importance of water and energy for oak diversity. Journal of BiogeographyJournal of Biogeography. 2016;43:279-288.
2015
Xu X, Dimitrov D, Rahbek C, Wang Z. NCBIminer: Sequences harvest from Genbank. EcographyEcography. 2015;38:426-430.
徐晓婷, 王志恒, Dimitrov D, Rahbek C. 批量下载GenBank基因序列数据的新工具——NCBIminer. 生物多样性. 2015;23:550-555.
González AMM, Dalsgaard B, Nogués-Bravo D, Graham CH, Schleuning M, Maruyama PK, Abrahamczyk S, Alarcón R, Araujo AC, Araújo FP, et al. The macroecology of phylogenetically structured hummingbird-plant networks. Global Ecology and BiogeographyGlobal Ecology and Biogeography. 2015;24:1212-1224.
Tao S, Fang J, Zhao X, Zhao S, Shen H, Hu H, Tang Z, Wang Z, Guo Q. Rapid loss of lakes on the Mongolian Plateau. Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2015;112:2281-2286.Abstract
Lakes are widely distributed on the Mongolian Plateau and, as critical water sources, have sustained Mongolian pastures for hundreds of years. However, the plateau has experienced significant lake shrinkage and grassland degradation during the past several decades. To quantify the changes in all of the lakes on the plateau and the associated driving factors, we performed a satellite-based survey using multitemporal Landsat images from the 1970s to 2000s, combined with ground-based censuses. Our results document a rapid loss of lakes on the plateau in the past decades: the number of lakes with a water surface area >1 km2 decreased from 785 in the late 1980s to 577 in 2010, with a greater rate of decrease (34.0%) in Inner Mongolia of China than in Mongolia (17.6%). This decrease has been particularly pronounced since the late 1990s in Inner Mongolia and the number of lakes >10 km2 has declined by 30.0%. The statistical analyses suggested that in Mongolia precipitation was the dominant driver for the lake changes, and in Inner Mongolia coal mining was most important in its grassland area and irrigation was the leading factor in its cultivated area. The deterioration of lakes is expected to continue in the following decades not only because of changing climate but also increasing exploitation of underground mineral and groundwater resources on the plateau. To protect grasslands and the indigenous nomads, effective action is urgently required to save these valuable lakes from further deterioration.
2014
Dalsgaard B, Carstensen DW, Fjeldså J, Maruyama PK, Rahbek C, Sandel B, Sonne J, Svenning J-C, Wang Z, Sutherland WJ. Determinants of bird species richness, endemism, and island network roles in Wallacea and the West Indies: is geography sufficient or does current and historical climate matter?. Ecology and Evolution. 2014;4:4019-4031.
Kennedy JD, Wang Z, Weir JT, Rahbek C, Fjeldså J, Price TD. Into and out of the tropics: the generation of the latitudinal gradient among New World passerine birds. Journal of BiogeographyJournal of Biogeography. 2014;41:1746–1757.
2013
Holt BG, Lessard J-P, Borregaard MK, Fritz SA, Araújo MB, Dimitrov D, Fabre P-H, Graham CH, Graves GR, Jønsson KA, et al. Response to Comment on “An Update of Wallace’s Zoogeographic Regions of the World”. ScienceScience. 2013;341:343.Abstract
Kreft and Jetz’s critique of our recent update of Wallace’s zoogeographical regions disregards the extensive sensitivity analyses we undertook, which demonstrate the robustness of our results to the choice of phylogenetic data and clustering algorithm. Their suggested distinction between “transition zones” and biogeographic regions is worthy of further investigation but is thus far unsubstantiated.
Kang J, Zhang H, Sun T, Shi Y, Wang J, Zhang B, Wang Z, Zhou Y, Gu H. Natural variation of C-repeat-binding factor (CBFs) genes is a major cause of divergence in freezing tolerance among a group of Arabidopsis thaliana populations along the Yangtze River in China. New Phytologist. 2013;199:1069-1080.
Li L, Wang Z, Zerbe S, Abdusalih N, Tang Z, Ma M, Yin L, Mohammat A, Han W, Fang J. Species richness patterns and water-energy dynamics in the drylands of Northwest China. PLoS OnePLoS One. 2013;8:e66450.Abstract
<p>Dryland ecosystems are highly vulnerable to climatic and land-use changes, while the mechanisms underlying patterns of dryland species richness are still elusive. With distributions of 3637 native vascular plants, 154 mammals, and 425 birds in Xinjiang, China, we tested the water-energy dynamics hypothesis for species richness patterns in Central Asian drylands. Our results supported the water-energy dynamics hypothesis. We found that species richness of all three groups was a hump-shaped function of energy availability, but a linear function of water availability. We further found that water availability had stronger effects on plant richness, but weaker effects on vertebrate richness than energy availability. We conducted piecewise linear regressions to detect the breakpoints in the relationship between species richness and potential evapotranspiration which divided Xinjiang into low and high energy regions. The concordance between mammal and plant richness was stronger in high than in low energy regions, which was opposite to that between birds and plants. Plant richness had stronger effects than climate on mammal richness regardless of energy levels, but on bird richness only in high energy regions. The changes in the concordance between vertebrate and plant richness along the climatic gradient suggest that cautions are needed when using concordance between taxa in conservation planning.</p>
Xu X, Wang Z, Rahbek C, Lessard J-P, Fang J. Evolutionary history influences the effects of water–energy dynamics on oak diversity in Asia. Journal of BiogeographyJournal of Biogeography. 2013;40:2146–2155.
Feng X, Vonk JE, van Dongen BE, Gustafsson Ö, Semiletov IP, Dudarev OV, Wang Z, Montluçon DB, Wacker L, Eglinton TI. Differential mobilization of terrestrial carbon pools in Eurasian Arctic river basins. Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2013;110:14168-14173.Abstract
Mobilization of Arctic permafrost carbon is expected to increase with warming-induced thawing. However, this effect is challenging to assess due to the diverse processes controlling the release of various organic carbon (OC) pools from heterogeneous Arctic landscapes. Here, by radiocarbon dating various terrestrial OC components in fluvially and coastally integrated estuarine sediments, we present a unique framework for deconvoluting the contrasting mobilization mechanisms of surface vs. deep (permafrost) carbon pools across the climosequence of the Eurasian Arctic. Vascular plant-derived lignin phenol 14C contents reveal significant inputs of young carbon from surface sources whose delivery is dominantly controlled by river runoff. In contrast, plant wax lipids predominantly trace ancient (permafrost) OC that is preferentially mobilized from discontinuous permafrost regions, where hydrological conduits penetrate deeper into soils and thermokarst erosion occurs more frequently. Because river runoff has significantly increased across the Eurasian Arctic in recent decades, we estimate from an isotopic mixing model that, in tandem with an increased transfer of young surface carbon, the proportion of mobilized terrestrial OC accounted for by ancient carbon has increased by 3–6% between 1985 and 2004. These findings suggest that although partly masked by surface carbon export, climate change-induced mobilization of old permafrost carbon is well underway in the Arctic.
Holt BG, Lessard J-P, Borregaard MK, Fritz SA, Araújo MB, Dimitrov D, Fabre P-H, Graham CH, Graves GR, Jønsson KA, et al. An Update of Wallace’s Zoogeographic Regions of the World. ScienceScience. 2013;339:74-78.Abstract
Modern attempts to produce biogeographic maps focus on the distribution of species, and the maps are typically drawn without phylogenetic considerations. Here, we generate a global map of zoogeographic regions by combining data on the distributions and phylogenetic relationships of 21,037 species of amphibians, birds, and mammals. We identify 20 distinct zoogeographic regions, which are grouped into 11 larger realms. We document the lack of support for several regions previously defined based on distributional data and show that spatial turnover in the phylogenetic composition of vertebrate assemblages is higher in the Southern than in the Northern Hemisphere. We further show that the integration of phylogenetic information provides valuable insight on historical relationships among regions, permitting the identification of evolutionarily unique regions of the world.
Dalsgaard B, Trøjelsgaard K, González AMM, Nogués-Bravo D, Ollerton J, Petanidou T, Sandel B, Schleuning M, Wang Z, Rahbek C, et al. Historical climate-change influences modularity and nestedness of pollination networks. EcographyEcography. 2013;36:1331-1340.
2012
Fang J, Shen Z, Tang Z, Wang X, Wang Z, Feng J, Liu Y, Qiao X, Wu X, Zheng C. Forest community survey and the structural characteristics of forests in China. EcographyEcography. 2012;35:1059-1184.

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