bioRxivpreprint

From field naturalism to Bayesian models: fog-frost interaction shapes growth form partitioning along Himalayan gradient

Mountain gradients facilitate our understanding of species' range limits, competition dynamics, stress-resilience trade-offs, and determinants of vegetation zone boundaries. Forest compositional models often use altitude as the main predictor, a proxy for temperature that is defensible where floristic transitions are gradual and climate relationships are linear. However, mountains with distinct assemblages, representing tropical gradients or areas with complex biogeographic history, require a modeling framework that reflects non-linear dynamics or interactions between environmental factors, including outlier events (rather than mean conditions). Our study system encompasses both tropical and

ecology