Integrative Biology Journals

13 January 2026, Volume 47 Issue 06
    

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    Editorial
  • Hang Sun, Yongping Yang, Weibang Sun, Rong Li, Tao Deng
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 849-851. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.11.003
  • Yang Yang, Jianguo Chen, Bo Song, Yazhou Zhang, Yang Niu, Zihan Jiang, Hang Sun
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 852-865. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.10.007
    As the highest and largest plateau in the world, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) covers wide geological, topographical and climatic gradients and thus acts as a major center for biodiversity and houses a diverse array of high elevation ecosystems. Together these factors make the QTP a critical ecological shield for Asia. However, the composition, structure and function of plant diversity in QTP has experienced profound changes in recent decades. Long-term on-site monitoring, field experiments, remote sensing, and simulations have led to significant advances in our understanding of how plant diversity on the QTP has responded to climate change and human activity. This review synthesizes findings from previous researches on how climate change and human activity have impacted plant diversity on the QTP. We identify gaps in our knowledge and highlight the need for interdisciplinary studies, long-term monitoring networks, and adaptive management strategies to enhance our knowledge and safeguard the QTP’s biodiversity amid accelerating global climate change.
  • Georg Miehe, Kangshan Mao, Shabeh ul Hasson, Jürgen Böhner, Udo Schickhoff
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 866-875. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.08.005
    The conversion of forests to pastures is the most important human intervention that has shaped the natural landscape into the Anthropocene environment. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP), which has both forest drought-lines and alpine treelines with specific ecotone structures, including isolated trees in treeless plant-covers that represent ever existed forest cover according to ‘Lonely Tooth Hypothesis’, offers an excellent model in which to examine the extent and timing of human activity on the conversion of forest to pasture. The objectives of this paper are to review (1) palaeo-environmental records of the Early Holocene that indicate when forests were first converted to ‘alpine meadows’, and (2) current records of the changing treeline ecotone in the region. ‘Alpine meadows’ of the QTP are part of the largest conversion of mountain forests into pastures worldwide. This change in forest cover is possibly a consequence of the agro-pastoral transition and the dawn of the Anthropocene on the QTP. To date, however, there is an interdisciplinary gap in knowledge of 5000 years between the palaeo-ecological and the archaeolocical and zoo-archaeological records. Rapid changes of the rural economy and the exodus from remote highland villages to down-country cities have diminished the age-old impacts of summer grazing and pasture management by fire; reforestation is obvious, but often seen exclusively as an effect of Anthropocene global warming. We believe that more interdisciplinary collaborations on the QTP are necessary to increase our understanding of the treelines of the Anthropocene in High Asia.
  • Lin Zhang, Xiao-Ming Lu, Hua-Zhong Zhu, Shan Gao, Jian Sun, Hai-Feng Zhu, Jiang-Ping Fang, J. Julio Camarero, Er-Yuan Liang
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 876-882. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.03.002
    A better understanding of the structure and dynamics of disturbed forests is key for forecasting their future successional trajectories. Despite vulnerability of subalpine forests to warming climate, little is known as to how their community composition has responded to disturbances and climate warming over decades. Before the 1970s, subalpine forests on the southeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau mainly experienced logging and fire, but afterwards they were more impacted by climate warming. Thus, they provide an excellent setting to test whether disturbances and climate warming led to changes in forest structure. Based on the analysis of 3145 forest inventory plots at 4- to 5-year resolution, we found that spruce-fir forests shifted to pine and broadleaved forests since the early 1970s. Such a turnover in species composition mainly occurred in the 1994–1998 period. By strongly altering site conditions, disturbances in concert with climate warming reshuffle community composition to warm-adapted broadleaf-pine species. Thus, moderate disturbances shifted forest composition through a gradual loss of resilience of spruce-fir forests. Shifts in these foundation species will have profound impacts on ecosystem functions and services. In the future, broadleaved forests could expand more rapidly than evergreen needle-leaved forests under moderate warming scenarios. In addition to climate, the effects of anthropogenic disturbances on subalpine forests should be considered in adaptive forest management and in projections of future forest changes.
  • Articles
  • Hong Qian, Tao Deng
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 883-888. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.01.001
    The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) is the highest and one of the most extensive plateaus in the world. Investigating naturalized non-native plant species composition, phylogenetic relationships among naturalized plant species, and phylogenetic relationships between native and naturalized plant species on the plateau is of great importance. Here, we analyze a comprehensive dataset including all species of native and naturalized vascular plants known to occur in the core part of the QTP. We use net relatedness index (NRI) and nearest taxon index (NTI), which reflect deep and shallow evolutionary histories, respectively, to quantify phylogenetic relatedness among angiosperm species. The QTP included in this study (1,448,815 km2) has 9086 and 314 species of native and naturalized non-native vascular plants, respectively. We find that the naturalized angiosperm species are phylogenetically clustered with respect to the species pool including all native and naturalized angiosperm species on the QTP included in this study, regardless of whether NRI or NTI is used. For the eight regions within the QTP included in this study, NRI and NTI of naturalized angiosperms are positive in seven regions with respect to their respective regional species pools, reflecting phylogenetic clustering. Thus, naturalized angiosperm species are a phylogenetically clustered subset of all angiosperm species on the QTP, regardless of whether the studied plateau as a whole or its constituent regions are considered.
  • Renyu Zhou, Pengfei Yang, Xufang Chen, Minshu Song, Hang Sun, Jianguo Chen
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 889-898. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.11.003
    Population shrinkage of alpine cushion plants with ongoing climate warming has been empirically confirmed. Since cushion plants play important roles in sustaining alpine plant community and ecosystem functions, their population dynamics may directly influence the future alpine ecosystems. However, little is known about how climate warming affect cushion population recruitment, especially at early life-history stages. In this study, we conducted a laboratory simulation of climate warming to detect the effects of warming temperature and associated moisture and light changes on seed germination and seedling growth of the typical alpine cushion plant Arenaria oreophila. Results suggested that increasing temperature indeed exerted strong constraints on the population recruitment processes. Specifically, increased temperatures could quickly initialize seed germination (4–6 days at higher temperatures vs. 29–32 days at low temperature, respectively, after sowing), accelerate them to reach the maximum germination percentage (9–19 days at higher temperatures vs. 57–86 days at low temperature, respectively, after sowing) and significantly accelerate seedling growth rate. However, higher temperatures accelerated seedling mortality (more than 80%). In addition, lower light availability also increased seedling mortality though it could generally increase the final seed germination percentage. The effects of water might be dependent on temperature and light. All results suggested that cushion A. oreophila is quite sensitive to climate warming which strongly constrains its seedling establishment process. We, therefore, speculate that the continuing climate warming in future will exert uncertain risks in the persistence of cushion A. oreophila, possibly by constraining the process of seedling recruitments.
  • Yan Zheng, Landi Luo, Xieshengyang Li, Qian Chen, Ya Yang, Yuanwen Duan, Xiangxiang Kong, Yongping Yang
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 899-907. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.04.002
    Tibetan turnip and oilseeds are the most important vegetables cultivated in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Our field observations identified a dominant early-bolting phenotype at the vegetative growth stage in the Tibetan turnip, which was possibly due to cross-pollination contamination from nearby oilseeds. We performed genetic and molecular experiments to explore the main reason for early bolting. We first analyzed gene expression and genomic sequence variation of turnip and oilseed BraFLC2, a gene that acts as a key repressor of flowering in turnip in a dosage-dependent manner. We found that the differences in flowering time and life habits between turnip and oilseeds were closely correlated with the genetic variations in BraFLC2. We further identified that the early-bolting turnip was the hybrid between turnip and oilseeds by selecting BraFLC2 as a testing gene. Furthermore, using an artificial hybridization experiment, we found that the heterozygote and low levels of BraFLC2 expression promoted early bolting in hybrid plants. These findings indicate that early-bolting in turnip is caused by cross-pollination contamination from oilseeds under human agricultural activities. We propose a strategy of strict seed screening, cultivation isolation and turnip breeding to ensure high quality and yield.
  • Yun-Long Pan, Hai-Ping Tang, Dong Liu, Yong-Gui Ma
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 908-919. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2023.06.007
    The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) has three main grassland types: alpine meadow, alpine steppe, and alpine desert steppe. In this study, we asked how plant productivity and species diversity vary with altitude, longitude and latitude in alpine grasslands of the QTP. We then identified the environmental factors that drive these observed patterns of plant productivity and species diversity. We found that although plant productivity and species diversity varied greatly across large-scale longitudinal and latitudinal gradients, these changes were strongest across the longitudinal gradient. This finding indicates that moisture rather than temperature has the greatest impact on plant productivity and species diversity of the alpine grasslands in the QTP. We also found that besides soil and climate factors, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) also has significant effects on plant productivity, and barometric pressure and partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) also have significant effects on species diversity. Furthermore, the relationship between the biomass of grassland-dominant species and species diversity was affected by the spatial scale at which these factors were studied. Our study provides new insights into the interconnections between plant productivity and species diversity and the major factors that influence alpine grasslands. It also provides a scientific basis for the maintenance of plant diversity and ecosystem functions in hypoxic (low-oxygen) regions.
  • You Wu, Rong Liu, Wei-Jia Wang, De-Zhu Li, Kevin S. Burgess, Wen-Bin Yu, Hong Wang
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 920-930. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.09.005
    Complete plastid genomes have been proposed as potential “super-barcodes” for plant identification and delineation, particularly in cases where standard DNA barcodes may be insufficient. However, few studies have systematically addressed how taxonomic complexity, especially in rapidly radiating lineages with intricate evolutionary histories, might influence the efficacy of plastome-scale barcodes. Pedicularis is a hyperdiverse genus in the Himalaya-Hengduan Mountains, and previous studies have demonstrated high discriminatory power of the standard barcodes within this genus. Therefore, Pedicularis serves as a model for investigating the key plastome-sequence characteristics and biological phenomena that determine species-discrimination capacity. In this study, we evaluated 292 plastomes representing 96 Pedicularis species to compare the discriminatory power of complete plastid genomes with of standard DNA barcodes. Our results revealed that the traditional standard barcode combination (nrITS + matK + rbcL + trnH-psbA) achieved the highest discrimination rates (81.25%), closely followed by the plastid large single copy (LSC) region (80.21%), then by full plastome, the supermatrix of protein-coding genes, and hypervariable regions (79.17%). Notably, the matK and ycf1 gene alone could discriminate 78.13% of species. Key determinants of species discrimination by integrating alignment length (AL) and the proportion of parsimony-informative sites (PPIS), as well as conserved genes under relaxed selection exhibiting stronger discriminatory capacity. Unlike previous studies that demonstrated superior discrimination rates of plastome-scale barcodes, this study reveals a notable exception of minimal differences between traditional DNA and plastome-scale barcodes that appearing linked to Pedicularis’ specific biological habits and potentially reflecting unique evolutionary patterns in the plastid genome.
  • Xiaochun Shu, Ruisen Lu, Pat Heslop-Harrison, Trude Schwarzacher, Zhong Wang, Yalong Qin, Ning Wang, Fengjiao Zhang
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 931-943. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.06.010
    Hybridization and polyploidy are key drivers of species diversity and genome variation in Lycoris, but their cytological and evolutionary consequences remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated chromosome numbers and genome sizes in 64 accessions representing the morphological diversity across the genus. Chromosome numbers ranged from 12 to 33, with seven accessions newly identified, including L. chunxiaoensis (2n = 33), two putative L. guangxiensis (2n = 19), and five natural hybrids (2n = 16, 18, 29, 33). Genome sizes varied from 18.03 Gb (L. wulingensis) to 32.62 Gb (L. caldwellii). Although no significant correlation was found between genome size and chromosome number across all accessions, a strong correlation within ploidy-level groups (i.e., diploid or aneuploid) suggested roles for post-polyploid diploidization, aneuploidy, and dysploidy in speciation. Phylogenetic analyses based on chloroplast genomes and nuclear DNA sequences revealed significant discordance, indicating a complex reticulate evolution and historical hybridization, which may complicate morphological classification. Chromosome number aligned more closely with morphological groups, underscoring the necessity of integrating cytological, molecular, and morphological data for accurate taxonomy, particularly in large-genome taxa. Based on this evidence, we propose a putative speciation pathway involving multiple hybridization and polyploidization events, with allopolyploidy playing a predominant role. Furthermore, our results indicate that the species L. insularis and L. longifolia are geographic populations of L. sprengeri and L. aurea, respectively, and confirmed the distribution of L. traubii and L. albiflora in mainland China. These findings offer new insights into the mechanisms underlying speciation, interspecific relationships, and the evolutionary history of Lycoris.
  • Wei Zheng, Li-Jun Yan, Kevin S. Burgess, Richard I. Milne, Han-Tao Qin, Shao-Lin Tan, Ya-Huang Luo, Jia-Yun Zou, Zhi-Qiong Mo, Michael Möller, Chao-Nan Fu, Lian-Ming Gao
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 944-955. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.04.005
    The study of natural hybridization facilitates our understanding of potential adaptive mechanisms in evolution and the process involved in speciation. In this study, we used multiple data types, including morphological traits, ddRAD-seq and ecological niche data, to investigate the differences among Rhododendron×duclouxii hybrid zones and the mechanisms underlying natural hybridization and possible future evolutionary pathways. Our results show that the origins of each hybrid zone are independent, with variations in hybrid formation, structural characteristics, and patterns of genetic components and morphological trait differentiation. There were no significant differences in morphological traits or genetic variation between the F1 and F2 generations; however, the range of variation of the F2 generation was broader than that of the F1 generation. The distribution and ecological characteristics of Rduclouxii did not significantly differ from those of the two parental species, indicating weak ecological niche preferences between the hybrid and parental taxa. These results imply that the hybrid zones of Rduclouxii are characterized by considerable variability, with the magnitude of hybridization in each case likely influenced by unique combinations of biological and ecological factors specific to each hybrid zone. We predict that Rduclouxii hybrid zones will persist and give rise to complex hybrid swarms, each potentially leading to different evolutionary outcomes.
  • Ming-Shu Zhu, Zhi-Qiong Mo, Michael Möller, Ting Zhang, Chao-Nan Fu, Jie Cai, Wei Zheng, Ya-Huang Luo, De-Zhu Li, Lian-Ming Gao
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 956-968. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.05.006
    Over the past century, anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions have continuously increased global temperature and triggered climate change, significantly impacting species distributions and biodiversity patterns. Understanding how climate-driven shifts in species distributions reshape diversity patterns is crucial for formulating effective future conservation strategies. Based on the distribution data of 314 Rhododendron species in China, along with 16 environmental variables, we examined spatial diversity patterns and assessed regional and biome differences in species responses using ensembled species distribution models. Our results indicated that climatic variables significantly influenced species distributions, with ongoing climate change expected to concentrate Rhododendron distribution patterns and alter species composition. Regional topography played a critical role in shaping species responses to global warming. In the mountainous areas of southwestern China, species exhibited heightened sensitivity to temperature fluctuations, shifting upward as temperature increased. This region also had a higher proportion of threatened species and showed an overall contraction in primary distribution range. Conversely, in southern China, species were more influenced by precipitation, exhibiting a notable northward shift and expansion in primary distribution areas. Notably, alpine species, occurring in habitats above the treeline, may face severe survival risks due to the high degree of habitat loss and fragmentation. We identified seven priority conservation areas, predominantly situated in highly fragmented mountainous regions that were inadequately protected by existing nature reserves. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of changes in Rhododendron diversity patterns under climate change, providing valuable insights for developing comprehensive, flora-wide conservation plans in China.
  • Nipeng Qian, Linxu Wang, Gangdun Li, Chunchao Dong, Zhenzhao Xu, Qijing Liu, Guang Zhou
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 969-980. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.07.001
    Climate warming is reshaping the phenology of plants in recent decades, with potential implications for forest productivity, carbon sequestration, and ecosystem functioning. While the effects of warming on secondary growth phenology is becoming increasingly clear, the influence of environmental factors on different developmental phases of xylem remains to be quantified. In this study, we investigated the temporal dynamics of xylem cell enlargement, wall-thickening, and the interval between these events in twelve temperate tree species from Northeast China over the period 2019–2024. We found that both cell enlargement and wall-thickening advanced significantly in response to climate warming, with species-specific variations in the rate of advancement. Importantly, the advancing rate of wall-thickening was greater than that of cell enlargement, leading to a shortening of the interval between these two events. Linear mixed-effects models revealed that photoperiod, forcing temperature, and precipitation were the primary environmental drivers influencing the timing of both cell enlargement and wall-thickening, with photoperiod emerging as the most important factor. These results suggest that climate warming accelerates the heat accumulation required for the transition from xylem cell enlargement to wall-thickening, thereby shortening the time interval between these two developmental stages. Beyond contributing valuable multi-year xylem phenological data, our results provide mechanistic insights that enhance predictions of wood formation dynamics under future climate scenarios and improve the accuracy of forest carbon models.
  • Aiying Zhang, Xiaofei Wei, Donghao Wu, Zhonghan Wang, Mingjian Yu, Lingfeng Mao
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 981-990. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.08.003
    Habitat fragmentation dramatically reshapes species richness and community composition. However, most estimates of β-diversity rely on incidence-based metrics, which consider only species presence/absence. Here, we introduce a novel framework that explicitly incorporates species abundance and intraspecific trait variation (ITV) into the quantification of taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic β-diversity, allowing a more nuanced understanding of community differentiation. To demonstrate the utility of this framework, we quantified the effects of island area and isolation on β-diversity across plant communities in China's Thousand Island Lake. Abundance-weighted taxonomic multiple-site/pairwise β-diversity showed substantially higher nestedness and stronger nestedness-area relationship than incidence-based metrics, indicating that species-poor communities are not only subsets of richer ones but share similar abundance hierarchies, highlighting strong environmental filtering and hierarchical species sorting. We also found that the turnover component was less sensitive to isolation, suggesting limited dispersal effects. Incidence-based functional and phylogenetic distances increased with differences in island area, but these associations weakened or disappeared in abundance-weighted measures, suggesting stronger environmental filtering and functional/phylogenetic clustering among larger islands. Only abundance-weighted standardized effect sizes increased with island area differences. Additionally, ITV further amplified functional nestedness and buffered the influence of isolation on turnover, emphasizing its role in mitigating dispersal limitations. By jointly considering abundance and ITV, two often-overlooked but critical dimensions, this study advances our understanding of how fragmentation shapes β-diversity. These findings highlight the importance of integrating abundance-weighted and trait-based metrics into conservation strategies to better detect functionally important species, prioritize larger habitat patches, and design biodiversity monitoring that captures within-species variation.
  • Sining Zhang, Jun Chen, Pan Li
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 991-994. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.09.007
    Prunus spinulosa (2n = 4x = 32) is an evergreen species of significant medicinal usage and ecological value. However, the lacking of a high-quality genome of P. spinulosa has obstructed further exploration of its ecological study and phylogenetic relationship of Prunus. In this study, we present the first haplotype-resolved genome assembly of Prunus s.l. subgenus Laurocerasus, the tetraploid genome of P. spinulosa was phased into 32 pseudochromosomes with 4 haplotypes, the genome size of each haplotype ranged from 249.82 Mb to 259.69 Mb, and N50 fluctuated from 31.35 Mb to 33.25 Mb, the protein-coding genes vary from 21,272 to 22,668. Different evaluation methods showed that the P. spinulosa genome assembly has high quality of completeness, continuity and accuracy. Being the first complete genome of P. spinulosa, it provides a valuable genetic resource for the Prunus tetraploid species database and supports further functional genomic study of this species.
  • Anurag Dhyani, K. K. Sabu, M. P. Geethakumary, M. A. Jabbar, S. Suresh, Morgan R. Gostel
    Plant Diversity. 2025, 47(06): 995-997. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pld.2025.10.001