Cross-scale analysis of the region effect on vascular plant species diversity in southern and northern European mountain ranges.


Autoria(s): Lenoir J.; Gégout J.C.; Guisan A.; Vittoz P.; Wohlgemuth T.; Zimmermann N.E.; Dullinger S.; Pauli H.; Willner W.; Grytnes J.A.; Virtanen R.; Svenning J.C.
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

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 gamma-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. Because different processes can lead to a similar pattern, we discuss the consistency of our results with Quaternary history and other divergent features between the two regions such as habitat connectivity, selection for vagility and environmental differences not accounted for in our analyses

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_FAAADE66C357

isbn:1932-6203 (Electronic)

pmid:21203521

doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0015734

isiid:000285578000050

http://my.unil.ch/serval/document/BIB_FAAADE66C357.pdf

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_FAAADE66C3578

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

PLoS One, vol. 5, no. 12, pp. e15734

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article