The impact of environmental factors on phenotypic diversity of natural populations of Polyspora in China
Changle Ma, Maiyu Gong, Qing Gui, Zhifeng Fan, Jianxin Yang, Lijuan Wang, Lilan Deng

TL;DR
This study explores how environmental factors influence the phenotypic diversity of Polyspora plants in China, revealing significant variation across species and traits.
Contribution
The study provides the first systematic analysis of phenotypic diversity in Polyspora species and identifies key environmental influences on leaf traits.
Findings
Polyspora species show significant interspecific and intraspecific phenotypic variation, with leaf traits having the highest average coefficient of variation (24%).
Bioclimatic variables and ultraviolet radiation significantly influence leaf trait variation in Polyspora species.
Morphological traits like style length and sepal length exhibit strong phylogenetic signals, indicating evolutionary conservation.
Abstract
Plant phenotypic diversity is not solely determined by genetic variation but is also shaped by the combined effects of environmental factors. Polyspora, a genus within the Theaceae family, consists of evergreen trees or shrubs widely recognized for their horticultural value and suitability for afforestation in mountainous regions. Despite its ecological and economic significance, the genus Polyspora has received relatively limited attention from the plant taxonomy community, and no systematic studies on its phenotypic diversity have been conducted to date. Thus, we conducted a comprehensive investigation on the phenotypic traits of Polyspora (8 species, 32 populations) distributed across China. We employed nested variance analysis to characterize the variation patterns of phenotypic traits within and among populations. Furthermore, redundancy analysis and Pearson correlation analysis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Plant and animal studies · Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
