Cross-Scale Analysis of the Region Effect on Vascular Plant Species Diversity in Southern and Northern European Mountain Ranges

Archive ouverte

Lenoir, Jonathan, Roger Michel Henri | Gégout, Jean-Claude | Guisan, Antoine | Vittoz, Pascal | Wohlgemuth, Thomas | Zimmermann, Niklaus E. | Dullinger, Stefan | Pauli, Harald | Willner, Wolfgang | Grytnes, John-Arvid | Virtanen, Risto | Svenning, Jens-Christian

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

Background: The divergent glacial histories of southern and northern Europe affect present-day species diversity at coarse-grained scales in these two regions, but do these effects also penetrate to the more fine-grained scales of local communities? Methodology/Principal Findings: We carried out a cross-scale analysis to address this question for vascular plants in two mountain regions, the Alps in southern Europe and the Scandes in northern Europe, using environmentally paired vegetation plots in the two regions (n = 403 in each region) to quantify four diversity components: (i) total number of species occurring in a region (total gamma-diversity), (ii) number of species that could occur in a target plot after environmental filtering (habitat-specific gamma-diversity), (iii) pair-wise species compositional turnover between plots (plot-to-plot beta-diversity) and (iv) number of species present per plot (plot alpha-diversity). We found strong region effects on total gamma-diversity, habitat-specific gamma-diversity and plot-to-plot beta-diversity, with a greater diversity in the Alps even towards distances smaller than 50 m between plots. In contrast, there was a slightly greater plot alpha-diversity in the Scandes, but with a tendency towards contrasting region effects on high and low soil-acidity plots. Conclusions/Significance: We conclude that there are strong regional differences between coarse-grained (landscape-to regional-scale) diversity components of the flora in the Alps and the Scandes mountain ranges, but that these differences do not necessarily penetrate to the finest-grained (plot-scale) diversity component, at least not on acidic soils. Our findings are consistent with the contrasting regional Quaternary histories, but we also consider alternative explanatory models. Notably, ecological sorting and habitat connectivity may play a role in the unexpected limited or reversed region effect on plot alpha-diversity, and may also affect the larger-scale diversity components. For instance, plot connectivity and/or selection for high dispersal ability may increase plot alpha-diversity and compensate for low total gamma-diversity.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Backstory of: Climate-related range shifts – a global multidimensional synthesis and new research directions

Archive ouverte | Lenoir, Jonathan, Roger Michel Henri | CCSD

This is the backstory behind the scientific article entitled "Climate-related range shifs – a global multidimensional synthesis and new research directions" published in Ecography.

Impacts of a rapid climate warming event on forest plant species distribution along the elevation gradient. Impacts d'un réchauffement rapide du climat sur la distribution des espèces végétales forestières le long du gradient d'altitude

Archive ouverte | Lenoir, Jonathan, Roger Michel Henri | CCSD

Do plant species shift their ranges in pace with the rapidly changing climate? Here we aimed to assess the magnitude of current changes in plant species distribution to answer this question for a currently understudied ecosystem, ...

Rethinking climate context dependencies in biological terms

Archive ouverte | Lenoir, Jonathan, Roger Michel Henri | CCSD

International audience. To detect biodiversity changes, biologists can rely on time series of historical observations and resurveys (1⇓–3). As global climate is warming, there is a staggering number of studies detec...

Chargement des enrichissements...