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Woody and herbaceous plants are differentially influenced by the environment,with non-random association with the evolutionary history of these taxa and their traits.In general,woody plants may have climate-dominated niches,whereas herbaceous plants may have edaphic and microhabitat-dominated niches.Here,we explored and mapped how the patterns of species richness,phylogenetic diversity,and structures of total,woody,and herbaceous plants vary across the geographical regions and with respect to 12 environmental variables across Ethiopia and Eritrea,in the horn of Africa.Our result showed that both richness and phylogenetic diversity had almost the same tendency in total woody and herbaceous plants,in which they showed positive relationships with annual precipitation,precipitation annual range of climate,all the three variables of topography,and total nitrogen and total extractable phosphorus of soil,and negative relations with mean annual temperature.Compared with the total and herbaceous plants,the environmental variables explained greater variance both in the standardized effect size phylogenetic diversity and net relatedness index for woody plants.Our results highlight that,on the large spatial scales,the environmental filtering process has played a greater role in structuring species into local communities for woody plants than for herbaceous plants.