Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.

Alpine areas are host to diverse plant communities that support ecosystems through structural and floral resources and persist through specialized adaptations to harsh high-elevation conditions. An ongoing question in these plant communities is whether composition is shaped by stochastic processes (...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Erik W Ertsgaard, Nicholas L Gjording, Jonathan D Bakker, Joseph A Kleinkopf, David E Giblin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0317140
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850025243025866752
author Erik W Ertsgaard
Nicholas L Gjording
Jonathan D Bakker
Joseph A Kleinkopf
David E Giblin
author_facet Erik W Ertsgaard
Nicholas L Gjording
Jonathan D Bakker
Joseph A Kleinkopf
David E Giblin
author_sort Erik W Ertsgaard
collection DOAJ
description Alpine areas are host to diverse plant communities that support ecosystems through structural and floral resources and persist through specialized adaptations to harsh high-elevation conditions. An ongoing question in these plant communities is whether composition is shaped by stochastic processes (e.g., dispersal limitations) or by deterministic processes (e.g., climate, geology), and if those processes select for common phylogenetic clades across space. This study evaluates the drivers of dissimilarity in alpine vascular plant communities across 32 peaks in the Cascade Mountain Range of Washington State and examines the effects of incorporating phylogenetic relatedness to these conclusions. We documented an average of 54 species per peak and used our overall inventory of 307 taxa to construct a phylogenetic tree for the entire mountain range plant community sampled. We used multivariate techniques to quantify the phylogenetic and taxonomic differences between alpine plant communities and to relate those differences to each peak's climate, geology, and topography. Our models indicate that the age of each peak's parent material formation, precipitation, latitude, and temperature had the largest role in shaping alpine plant communities relative to the baseline effects of distance between peaks and time of sampling. A unique result was a distinct plant community in peaks with ultramafic geologic parent material formed in the Paleozoic Era, which has an extreme geochemistry that we found to form evolutionarily distinct lineages compared to all other peaks. With changing climate conditions and disturbance regimes, understanding facets of alpine plant communities like species turnover, geologic endemism, and responses to precipitation changes are vital to conserving these ecosystems.
format Article
id doaj-art-e10e9793604047bf962e6cc80323c794
institution DOAJ
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-e10e9793604047bf962e6cc80323c7942025-08-20T03:00:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031714010.1371/journal.pone.0317140Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.Erik W ErtsgaardNicholas L GjordingJonathan D BakkerJoseph A KleinkopfDavid E GiblinAlpine areas are host to diverse plant communities that support ecosystems through structural and floral resources and persist through specialized adaptations to harsh high-elevation conditions. An ongoing question in these plant communities is whether composition is shaped by stochastic processes (e.g., dispersal limitations) or by deterministic processes (e.g., climate, geology), and if those processes select for common phylogenetic clades across space. This study evaluates the drivers of dissimilarity in alpine vascular plant communities across 32 peaks in the Cascade Mountain Range of Washington State and examines the effects of incorporating phylogenetic relatedness to these conclusions. We documented an average of 54 species per peak and used our overall inventory of 307 taxa to construct a phylogenetic tree for the entire mountain range plant community sampled. We used multivariate techniques to quantify the phylogenetic and taxonomic differences between alpine plant communities and to relate those differences to each peak's climate, geology, and topography. Our models indicate that the age of each peak's parent material formation, precipitation, latitude, and temperature had the largest role in shaping alpine plant communities relative to the baseline effects of distance between peaks and time of sampling. A unique result was a distinct plant community in peaks with ultramafic geologic parent material formed in the Paleozoic Era, which has an extreme geochemistry that we found to form evolutionarily distinct lineages compared to all other peaks. With changing climate conditions and disturbance regimes, understanding facets of alpine plant communities like species turnover, geologic endemism, and responses to precipitation changes are vital to conserving these ecosystems.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0317140
spellingShingle Erik W Ertsgaard
Nicholas L Gjording
Jonathan D Bakker
Joseph A Kleinkopf
David E Giblin
Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
PLoS ONE
title Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
title_full Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
title_fullStr Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
title_full_unstemmed Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
title_short Geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the Cascade Range of Washington.
title_sort geology and climate drive alpine plant compositional variation among peaks in the cascade range of washington
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0317140
work_keys_str_mv AT erikwertsgaard geologyandclimatedrivealpineplantcompositionalvariationamongpeaksinthecascaderangeofwashington
AT nicholaslgjording geologyandclimatedrivealpineplantcompositionalvariationamongpeaksinthecascaderangeofwashington
AT jonathandbakker geologyandclimatedrivealpineplantcompositionalvariationamongpeaksinthecascaderangeofwashington
AT josephakleinkopf geologyandclimatedrivealpineplantcompositionalvariationamongpeaksinthecascaderangeofwashington
AT davidegiblin geologyandclimatedrivealpineplantcompositionalvariationamongpeaksinthecascaderangeofwashington