
International research team investigates how environment and barriers to dispersal shape biodiversity
Why do some plants thrive in specific regions but not in others? A study led by researchers at the University of Göttingen explores the factors shaping plant distributions and how these patterns have changed over millions of years. Analyzing nearly 270,000 seed plant species worldwide, the research highlights the roles of environmental conditions and dispersal barriers in influencing global plant diversity. The results were published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.
Using advanced methods that integrate plant distributions with phylogenetic information - meaning data about the evolutionary relationships among plant species - researchers combined modern environmental data with historical reconstructions of Earth’s climate and geography spanning millions of years. The team examined how variations in climate, soil, and other environmental factors determine where plants can thrive and how physical barriers - such as oceans, mountain ranges, and areas with inhospitable climates - restrict plant dispersal.

"These findings reveal a fundamental process in nature," says Dr Lirong Cai from the University of Göttingen and the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv). "Given enough time, plants can overcome the barriers of vast distances and geography, but they often remain limited by the environments they encounter."
Original publication: Cai, L., et al. (2024). Environmental filtering, not dispersal history, explains global patterns of phylogenetic turnover in seed plants at deep evolutionary timescales. Nature Ecology and Evolution. DOI: 10.1038/s41559-024-02599-y