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Featured researches published by Juyu Lian.


Journal of Ecology | 2013

Scale‐dependent relationships between tree species richness and ecosystem function in forests

Ryan A. Chisholm; Helene C. Muller-Landau; Kassim Abdul Rahman; Daniel P. Bebber; Yue Bin; Stephanie A. Bohlman; Norman A. Bourg; Joshua S. Brinks; Sarayudh Bunyavejchewin; Nathalie Butt; Hong-Lin Cao; Min Cao; Dairon Cárdenas; Li-Wan Chang; Jyh-Min Chiang; George B. Chuyong; Richard Condit; H. S. Dattaraja; Stuart J. Davies; Alvaro Duque; Christine Fletcher; Nimal Gunatilleke; Savitri Gunatilleke; Zhanqing Hao; Rhett D. Harrison; Robert W. Howe; Chang-Fu Hsieh; Stephen P. Hubbell; Akira Itoh; David Kenfack

1. The relationship between species richness and ecosystem function, as measured by productivity or biomass, is of long-standing theoretical and practical interest in ecology. This is especially true for forests, which represent a majority of global biomass, productivity and biodiversity.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Exploring Tree-Habitat Associations in a Chinese Subtropical Forest Plot Using a Molecular Phylogeny Generated from DNA Barcode Loci

Nancai Pei; Juyu Lian; David L. Erickson; Nathan G. Swenson; W. John Kress; Wan-Hui Ye; Xue-Jun Ge

Elucidating the ecological mechanisms underlying community assembly in subtropical forests remains a central challenge for ecologists. The assembly of species into communities can be due to interspecific differences in habitat associations, and there is increasing evidence that these associations may have an underlying phylogenetic structure in contemporary terrestrial communities. In other words, by examining the degree to which closely related species prefer similar habitats and the degree to which they co-occur, ecologists are able to infer the mechanisms underlying community assembly. Here we implement this approach in a diverse subtropical tree community in China using a long-term forest dynamics plot and a molecular phylogeny generated from three DNA barcode loci. We find that there is phylogenetic signal in plant-habitat associations (i.e. closely related species tend to prefer similar habitats) and that patterns of co-occurrence within habitats are typically non-random with respect to phylogeny. In particular, we found phylogenetic clustering in valley and low-slope habitats in this forest, indicating a filtering of lineages plays a dominant role in structuring communities in these habitats and we found evidence of phylogenetic overdispersion in high-slope, ridge-top and high-gully habitats, indicating that distantly related species tended to co-occur in these high elevation habitats and that lineage filtering is less important in structuring these communities. Thus we infer that non-neutral niche-based processes acting upon evolutionarily conserved habitat preferences explain the assembly of local scale communities in the forest studied.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2013

Forest dynamics of a subtropical monsoon forest in Dinghushan, China: recruitment, mortality and the pace of community change

Yong Shen; Louis S. Santiago; Lei Ma; Guojun Lin; Juyu Lian; Hong-Lin Cao; Wan-Hui Ye

Structure and demographics in many tropical forests is changing, but the causes of these changes remain unclear. We studied 5 y (2005-2010) of species turnover, recruitment, mortality and population change data from a 20-hasubtropicalforestplotinDinghushan,China,toidentifytrendsinforestchange,andtotestwhethertreemortality is associated with intraspecific or interspecific competition. We found the Dinghushan forest to be more dynamic than one temperate and two tropical forests in a comparison of large, long-term forest dynamics plots. Within Dinghushan, size-classdistributionswerebell-shapedonlyforthethreemostdominantspeciesandreverseJ-shapedforotherspecies. Bell-shaped population distributions can indicate a population in decline, but our data suggest that these large and long-lived species are not in decline because the pattern is driven by increasing probabilities of transition to larger size class with increasing size and fast growth in saplings. Spatially aggregated tree species distributions were common for surviving and dead individuals. Competitive associations were more frequently intraspecific than interspecific. The competition that induced tree mortality was more associated with intraspecific than interspecific interactions. Intraspecific competitive exclusion and density-dependence appear to play important roles in tree mortality in this subtropical forest.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Unimodal Tree Size Distributions Possibly Result from Relatively Strong Conservatism in Intermediate Size Classes

Yue Bin; Wan-Hui Ye; Helene C. Muller-Landau; Linfang Wu; Juyu Lian; Hong-Lin Cao

Tree size distributions have long been of interest to ecologists and foresters because they reflect fundamental demographic processes. Previous studies have assumed that size distributions are often associated with population trends or with the degree of shade tolerance. We tested these associations for 31 tree species in a 20 ha plot in a Dinghushan south subtropical forest in China. These species varied widely in growth form and shade-tolerance. We used 2005 and 2010 census data from that plot. We found that 23 species had reversed J shaped size distributions, and eight species had unimodal size distributions in 2005. On average, modal species had lower recruitment rates than reversed J species, while showing no significant difference in mortality rates, per capita population growth rates or shade-tolerance. We compared the observed size distributions with the equilibrium distributions projected from observed size-dependent growth and mortality. We found that observed distributions generally had the same shape as predicted equilibrium distributions in both unimodal and reversed J species, but there were statistically significant, important quantitative differences between observed and projected equilibrium size distributions in most species, suggesting that these populations are not at equilibrium and that this forest is changing over time. Almost all modal species had U-shaped size-dependent mortality and/or growth functions, with turning points of both mortality and growth at intermediate size classes close to the peak in the size distribution. These results show that modal size distributions do not necessarily indicate either population decline or shade-intolerance. Instead, the modal species in our study were characterized by a life history strategy of relatively strong conservatism in an intermediate size class, leading to very low growth and mortality in that size class, and thus to a peak in the size distribution at intermediate sizes.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2016

Pollen and seed flow under different predominant winds in wind-pollinated and wind-dispersed species Engelhardia roxburghiana

Zheng-Feng Wang; Juyu Lian; Wan-Hui Ye; Hong-Lin Cao; Qianmei Zhang; Zhang-Ming Wang

In most plants, the contributions of pollen and seed flow to their genetic structures are generally difficult to disentangle. For typical wind-pollinated and wind-dispersed species Engelhardia roxburghiana in a 20-ha natural forest plot in lower subtropic China, because the prevailing wind directions change during its pollen release and seed dispersal seasons, we could compare its genetic structures in different directions, which could result primarily from pollen or seed flow. Furthermore, because the plot has undergone from an open to a closed canopy stage historically, we also examined forest canopy effects on gene flow in different generations and different directions. Using 522 E. roxburghiana individuals mapped in the plot, our results revealed that greater pollen flow led to biased gene flow in the pollen dispersal-predominant direction (pollen direction), while greater seed flow generated less spatial genetic structure in the seed dispersal-predominant direction (seed direction). The results predicted from generalized additive models indicated that canopy closure enhanced resistance to gene flow from the old generation to the new generation. Analyses by landscape genetic models for the new generation revealed that gene flow associated with pollen direction was more strongly affected by canopy than with seed direction. Our study is new by proposing an alternative way to separate effects of the pollen and seed flow on spatial variation patterns in E. roxburghiana. To our knowledge, our study is also the first attempt to use landscape genetic models to represent canopy effects for different dispersal vectors in spatial scales only up to a few hundred meters.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Tree aboveground carbon storage correlates with environmental gradients and functional diversity in a tropical forest

Yong Shen; Shixiao Yu; Juyu Lian; Hao Shen; Hong-Lin Cao; Huanping Lu; Wan-Hui Ye

Tropical forests play a disproportionately important role in the global carbon (C) cycle, but it remains unclear how local environments and functional diversity regulate tree aboveground C storage. We examined how three components (environments, functional dominance and diversity) affected C storage in Dinghushan 20-ha plot in China. There was large fine-scale variation in C storage. The three components significantly contributed to regulate C storage, but dominance and diversity of traits were associated with C storage in different directions. Structural equation models (SEMs) of dominance and diversity explained 34% and 32% of variation in C storage. Environments explained 26–44% of variation in dominance and diversity. Similar proportions of variation in C storage were explained by dominance and diversity in regression models, they were improved after adding environments. Diversity of maximum diameter was the best predictor of C storage. Complementarity and selection effects contributed to C storage simultaneously, and had similar importance. The SEMs disengaged the complex relationships among the three components and C storage, and established a framework to show the direct and indirect effects (via dominance and diversity) of local environments on C storage. We concluded that local environments are important for regulating functional diversity and C storage.


Ecography | 2018

Forest tree neighborhoods are structured more by negative conspecific density dependence than by interactions among closely related species

Lei Chen; Liza S. Comita; S. Joseph Wright; Nathan G. Swenson; Jess K. Zimmerman; Xiangcheng Mi; Zhanqing Hao; Wan-Hui Ye; Stephen P. Hubbell; W. John Kress; María Uriarte; Jill Thompson; Christopher J. Nytch; Xugao Wang; Juyu Lian; Keping Ma

Interactions among neighbors influence the structure of communities of sessile organisms. Closely related species tend to share habitat and resource requirements and to interact with the same mutualists and natural enemies so that the strength of interspecific interactions tends to decrease with evolutionary divergence time. Nevertheless, the degree to which such phylogenetically related ecological interactions structure plant communities remains unclear. Using data from five large mapped forest plots combined with a DNA barcode mega-phylogeny, we employed an individual-based approach to assess the collective effects of focal tree size on neighborhood phylogenetic relatedness. Abundance-weighted average divergence time for all neighbors (ADT_all) and for heterospecific neighbors only (ADT_hetero) were calculated for each individual of canopy tree species. Within local neighborhoods, we found phylogenetic composition changed with focal tree size. Specifically, significant increases in ADT_all with focal tree size were evident at all sites. In contrast, there was no significant change in ADT_hetero with tree size in four of the five sites for both sapling-sized and all neighbors, even at the smallest neighbourhood scale (0–5 m), suggesting a limited role for phylogeny-dependent interactions. However, there were inverse relationships between focal tree size and the proportion of heterospecific neighbors belonging to closely related species at some sites, providing evidence for negative phylogenetic density dependence. Overall, our results indicate that negative interaction with conspecifics had a much greater impact on neighborhood assemblages than interactions among closely related species and could contribute to community structure and diversity maintenance in different forest communities.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Spatial distribution patterns of ammonia-oxidizing archaea abundance in subtropical forests at early and late successional stages.

Jie Chen; Hui Zhang; Wei Liu; Juyu Lian; Wan-Hui Ye; Weijun Shen

Characterizing the spatial distribution patterns of soil microorganisms is helpful in understanding the biogeochemical processes they perform, but has been less studied relative to those of macroorganisms. In this study, we investigated and compared the spatially explicit distribution patterns of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) abundance and the influential factors between an early (ES) and a late successional (LS) subtropical forest stand. The average AOA abundance, vegetational attributes, and soil nutrient contents were mostly greater in the LS than the ES stand (P = 0.085 or smaller), but their spatial variations were more pronounced in the ES than the LS stand. The spatial distribution patches of AOA abundance were smaller and more irregular in the ES stand (patch size <50 m) than in the LS stand (patch size about 120 m). Edaphic and vegetational variables contributed more to the spatial variations of AOA abundance for the ES (9.3%) stand than for LS stand, whereas spatial variables (MEMs) were the main contributors (62%) for the LS stand. These results suggest that environmental filtering likely influence the spatial distribution of AOA abundance at early successional stage more than that at late successional stage, while spatial dispersal is dominant at late successional stage.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Forest dynamics and its driving forces of sub-tropical forest in South China.

Lei Ma; Juyu Lian; Guojun Lin; Hong-Lin Cao; Zhongliang Huang; Dongsheng Guan

Tree mortality and recruitment are key factors influencing forest dynamics, but the driving mechanisms of these processes remain unclear. To better understand these driving mechanisms, we studied forest dynamics over a 5-year period in a 20-ha sub-tropical forest in the Dinghushan Nature Reserve, South China. The goal was to identify determinants of tree mortality/recruitment at the local scale using neighborhood analyses on some locally dominant tree species. Results show that the study plot was more dynamic than some temperate and tropical forests in a comparison to large, long-term forest dynamics plots. Over the 5-year period, mortality rates ranged from 1.67 to 12.33% per year while recruitment rates ranged from 0 to 20.26% per year. Tree size had the most consistent effect on mortality across species. Recruitment into the ≥1-cm size class consistently occurred where local con-specific density was high. This suggests that recruitment may be limited by seed dispersal. Hetero-specific individuals also influenced recruitment significantly for some species. Canopy species had low recruitment into the ≥1-cm size class over the 5-year period. In conclusion, tree mortality and recruitment for sixteen species in this plot was likely limited by seed dispersal and density-dependence.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2016

Inferring community assembly processes from trait diversity across environmental gradients

Yong Shen; Shixiao Yu; Juyu Lian; Hao Shen; Hong-Lin Cao; Huanping Lu; Wan-Hui Ye

Environmental filtering and competitive interactions are important ecological processes in community assembly. The contribution of the two processes to community assembly can be evaluated by shifts in functional diversity patterns. We examined the correlations between functional diversity of six traits (leaf chlorophyll concentration, dry matter content, size, specific leaf area, thickness and wood density) and environmental gradients (topography and soil) for 92 species in the 20-ha Dinghushan forest plot in China. A partial Mantel test showed that most of the communityweighted mean trait values changed with terrain convexity and soil fertility, which implied that environmental filtering was occurring. Functional diversity of many traits significantly increased with increasing terrain convexity and soil fertility, which was associated with increased light and below-ground resources respectively. These results suggest that co-occurring species are functionally convergent in regions of strong abiotic stress under the environmental filtering, but functionally divergent in more benign environments due to resource partitioning and competitive interactions. Single-trait diversity and multivariate functional diversity had different relationships with environmental factors, indicating that traits were related to different niche axes, and associated with different ecological processes, which demonstrated the importance of focusing niche axes in traits selection. Between 9% and 41% of variation in functional diversity of different traits was explained by environmental factors in stepwise multiple regression models. Terrain convexity and soil fertility were the best predictors of functional diversity, which contributed 30.5% and 29.0% of total R2 to the model. These provided essential evidence that different environmental factors had distinguishing impacts on regulating diversity of traits.

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Wan-Hui Ye

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hong-Lin Cao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhang-Ming Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zheng-Feng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hao Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yong Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yue Bin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lei Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Huanping Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hui Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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