Abstract
Functional traits are influenced by phylogenetic constraints and environmental conditions, but previous large-scale studies modeled traits either as species weighted averages or directly from the environment, precluding analyses of the relative contributions of inter- and intraspecific variation across regions. We developed a joint model integrating phylogenetic and environmental information to understand and predict the distribution of eight leaf traits across the eastern USA. This model explained 68% of trait variation, outperforming both species-only and environment-only models, with variance attributable to species alone (23%), the environment alone (13%), and their combined effects (25%). The importance of the two drivers varied by trait. Predictions for the eastern USA produced accurate estimates of intraspecific variation and deviated from both species-only and environment-only models. Predictions revealed that intraspecific variation holds information across scales, affects relationships in the leaf economic spectrum and is key for interpreting trait distributions and ecosystem processes within and across ecoregions.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Open Research statement: All data and data products are archived and accessible on Zenodo (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4651366). Code to replicate the analyses and retrieve data is stored on GitHub (https://github.com/MarconiS/Disentangling-the-role-of-phylogeny-and-climate-on-joint-leaf-trait-distributions-across-Eastern-Uni/tree/0.1) and Zenodo (https://zenodo.org/badge/latestdoi/353383665).
Corrected references and widened the scope of the introduction before resubmitting.