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Featured researches published by Xiaoting Xu.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Response of spatial vegetation distribution in China to climate changes since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)

Siyang Wang; Xiaoting Xu; Nawal Shrestha; Niklaus E. Zimmermann; Zhiyao Tang; Zhiheng Wang

Analyzing how climate change affects vegetation distribution is one of the central issues of global change ecology as this has important implications for the carbon budget of terrestrial vegetation. Mapping vegetation distribution under historical climate scenarios is essential for understanding the response of vegetation distribution to future climatic changes. The reconstructions of palaeovegetation based on pollen data provide a useful method to understand the relationship between climate and vegetation distribution. However, this method is limited in time and space. Here, using species distribution model (SDM) approaches, we explored the climatic determinants of contemporary vegetation distribution and reconstructed the distribution of Chinese vegetation during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 18,000 14C yr BP) and Middle-Holocene (MH, 6000 14C yr BP). The dynamics of vegetation distribution since the LGM reconstructed by SDMs were largely consistent with those based on pollen data, suggesting that the SDM approach is a useful tool for studying historical vegetation dynamics and its response to climate change across time and space. Comparison between the modeled contemporary potential natural vegetation distribution and the observed contemporary distribution suggests that temperate deciduous forests, subtropical evergreen broadleaf forests, temperate deciduous shrublands and temperate steppe have low range fillings and are strongly influenced by human activities. In general, the Tibetan Plateau, North and Northeast China, and the areas near the 30°N in Central and Southeast China appeared to have experienced the highest turnover in vegetation due to climate change from the LGM to the present.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Historical factors shaped species diversity and composition of Salix in eastern Asia

Qinggang Wang; Xiangyan Su; Nawal Shrestha; Yunpeng Liu; Siyang Wang; Xiaoting Xu; Zhiheng Wang

Ambient energy, niche conservatism, historical climate stability and habitat heterogeneity hypothesis have been proposed to explain the broad-scale species diversity patterns and species compositions, while their relative importance have been controversial. Here, we assessed the relative contributions of contemporary climate, historical climate changes and habitat heterogeneity in shaping Salix species diversity and species composition in whole eastern Asia as well as mountains and lowlands using linear regressions and distance-based redundancy analyses, respectively. Salix diversity was negatively related with mean annual temperature. Habitat heterogeneity was more important than contemporary climate in shaping Salix diversity patterns, and their relative contributions were different in mountains and lowlands. In contrast, the species composition was strongly influenced by contemporary climate and historical climate change than habitat heterogeneity, and their relative contributions were nearly the same both in mountains and lowlands. Our findings supported niche conservatism and habitat heterogeneity hypotheses, but did not support ambient energy and historical climate stability hypotheses. The diversity pattern and species composition of Salix could not be well-explained by any single hypothesis tested, suggesting that other factors such as disturbance history and diversification rate may be also important in shaping the diversity pattern and composition of Salix species.


Ecography | 2018

Effects of contemporary environment and Quaternary climate change on drylands plant diversity differ between growth forms

Yunpeng Liu; Xiangyan Su; Nawal Shrestha; Xiaoting Xu; Siyang Wang; Yaoqi Li; Qinggang Wang; Denis V. Sandanov; Zhiheng Wang

Previous studies on large-scale patterns in plant richness and underlying mechanisms have mostly focused on forests and mountains, while drylands covering most of the world’s grasslands and deserts are more poorly investigated for lack of data. Here, we aim to 1) evaluate the plant richness patterns in Inner Asian drylands; 2) compare the relative importance of contemporary environment, historical climate, vegetation changes, and mid-domain effect (MDE); and 3) explore whether the dominant drivers of species richness differ across growth forms (woody vs herbaceous) and range sizes (common vs rare). Distribution data and growth forms of 13 248 seed plants were compiled from literature and species range sizes were estimated. Generalized linear models and hierarchical partitioning were used to evaluate the relative contribution of different factors. We found that habitat heterogeneity strongly affected both woody and herbaceous species. Precipitation, climate change since the mid-Holocene and climate seasonality dominated herbaceous richness patterns, while climate change since the Last Glacial Maximum dominated woody richness patterns. Rare species richness was strongly correlated with precipitation, habitat heterogeneity and historical climatic changes, while common species richness was strongly correlated with MDE (woody) or climate seasonality (herbaceous). Temperature had little effects on the species richness patterns of all groups. This study represents the first evaluation of the large-scale patterns of plant species richness in the Inner Asian drylands. Our results suggest that increasing water deficit due to anthropogenic activities combined with future global warming may increase the extinction risk of many grassland species. Rare species (both herbaceous and woody) may face severe challenges in the future due to increased habitat destruction caused by urbanization and resource exploitation. Overall, our findings indicate that the hypotheses on species richness patterns based on woody plants alone can be insufficient to explain the richness patterns of herbaceous species.


Journal of Biogeography | 2013

Evolutionary history influences the effects of water–energy dynamics on oak diversity in Asia

Xiaoting Xu; Zhiheng Wang; Carsten Rahbek; Jean-Philippe Lessard; Jingyun Fang


Journal of Biogeography | 2018

The drivers of high Rhododendron diversity in south-west China: Does seasonality matter?

Nawal Shrestha; Xiangyan Su; Xiaoting Xu; Zhiheng Wang


Diversity and Distributions | 2017

Determinants of richness patterns differ between rare and common species: implications for Gesneriaceae conservation in China

Yunpeng Liu; Zehao Shen; Qinggang Wang; Xiangyan Su; Wanjun Zhang; Nawal Shrestha; Xiaoting Xu; Zhiheng Wang


Journal of Biogeography | 2016

Geographical variation in the importance of water and energy for oak diversity

Xiaoting Xu; Zhiheng Wang; Carsten Rahbek; Nathan J. Sanders; Jingyun Fang


Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2016

Leaf margin analysis of Chinese woody plants and the constraints on its application to palaeoclimatic reconstruction

Yaoqi Li; Zhiheng Wang; Xiaoting Xu; Wenxuan Han; Qinggang Wang; Dongting Zou


Ecography | 2015

NCBIminer: sequences harvest from Genbank

Xiaoting Xu; Dimitar Dimitrov; Carsten Rahbek; Zhiheng Wang


Archive | 2018

Supplementary material from "Niche conservatism and elevated diversification shape species diversity in drylands: evidence from Zygophyllaceae"

Qinggang Wang; Shengdan Wu; Xiangyan Su; Linjing Zhang; Xiaoting Xu; Lisha Lyu; Hongyu Cai; Nawal Shrestha; Yunpeng Liu; Wei Wang; Zhiheng Wang

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