# ‘Out of the Tropics’ Sheds Light on Latitudinal Gradients in Clade Ages of Climbers, China

**Authors:** Mingfei Zhao, Hongbo Li, Yuhang Wang, Yuan Jiang, Muyi Kang, Kaixiong Xing

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71324 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-04-18

## TL;DR

This study explores how the age of climbing plant families changes with latitude in China, finding that older families are more common at higher latitudes, supporting the 'out of the tropics' hypothesis.

## Contribution

The first regional-scale survey of climbing plant family age patterns in China, revealing support for the 'out of the tropics' hypothesis over tropical niche conservatism.

## Key findings

- Mean family age (MFA) of climbers increases with latitude in China.
- Woody climbers' MFA is best explained by the 'out of the tropics' hypothesis.
- Herbaceous vines show weak climatic correlations in MFA patterns.

## Abstract

We aim to test hypotheses on the patterns of clade age of climbing plants under climatic variations along the latitudinal gradients in China. Specifically, we uncover their general patterns of mean family age (MFA) and their climatic drivers. We evaluate the extents to which both the tropical niche conservatism hypothesis (TNC) and the out of the tropics hypothesis (OTT) can account for the MFA of climbing plants, respectively. A dataset including 2487 climbing species was used to quantify geographical patterns of MFA across China. Spatial regression analyses with information‐theoretical multi‐model selections were performed to estimate the importance of climatic variables. There were generally increasing trends of MFA from low to high latitudes for all types of climbers. For woody climbers, MFA was negatively correlated with minimum temperature and annual mean precipitation but positively correlated with seasonal temperature and precipitation, and was mostly influenced by mean temperature of the coldest quarter. For herbaceous vines, the MFA pattern showed relatively insignificant correlations with all the climatic variables. Our results highlight that the OTT hypothesis offers a promising explanation for the latitudinal MFA gradients of climbers in China (especially for woody climbers), which turn out to be contrary to the TNC predictions.

The first survey concerning the geographical patterns of climbers in regional scale (in China). The mean family ages (MFA) of climbers and trees showed opposite trends with increasing latitude. The increasing MFA of woody climbers with increasing latitude could be effectively explained by the ‘out of the tropics hypothesis’.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** RBM15 (RNA binding motif protein 15) [NCBI Gene 64783] {aka OTT, OTT1}
- **Diseases:** embolism (MESH:D004617)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

54 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12008040/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12008040