Abstract

The long-term survival of relict populations depends on the accessibility of appropriate sites (microrefugia). In recent times, due to the mass extinction of rare species that has resulted from the loss of natural habitats, the question is – Are there any human-made sites that can act as refugial habitats? We examined forest roadside populations of the mountain plant Pulsatilla vernalis in the last large lowland refugium in Central Europe. We compared the habitat conditions and community structure of roadsides with P. vernalis against the forest interior. Light availability and bryophyte composition were the main factors that distinguished roadsides. Pulsatilla occurred on sites that had more light than the forest interior, but were also more or less shaded by trees, so more light came as one-side illumination from the road. Roadsides had also a lower coverage of bryophytes that formed large, dense carpets. At the same time, they were characterised by a greater richness of vascular plants and ‘small’ bryophytes, which corresponds to a higher frequency of disturbances. In a warming and more fertile Anthropocene world, competition plays the main role in the transformation of forest communities, which is why relict populations have found refugia in extensively disturbed human-made habitats.

Highlights

  • Understanding the response of a species to environmental changes is an urgent scientific issue in the context of the comprehensive human impact on ecosystems in the Anthropocene epoch[1]

  • In the context of the decline of many natural habitats, the questions are: Are there any elements in the human-structured landscape that could play the role of refugial habitats? If so, which habitat traits are crucial for the maintenance of old, relict populations?

  • In light of the long-term perspective of the survival of a relict population, anthropogenic sites can serve as microrefugia in the landscape if they have conditions that are similar to natural refugial habitats

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the response of a species to environmental changes is an urgent scientific issue in the context of the comprehensive human impact on ecosystems in the Anthropocene epoch[1] Natural laboratories for such studies are relict populations – a group of individuals living in isolation after a shift in the species range[2]. Large areas of quite-open and medium-disturbed habitats are created in such a way They are often characterised by a distinct microclimate and soil conditions in comparison to the forest interior[14,15,16]. Because roads and their surroundings can be considered to be specific ecosystems with a permanent structure in the forest landscape[14], we assumed that they could play a refugial role for some relict populations. There are the light-demanding species of early-successional habitats, whose abundance in the forest interior can be strongly limited by the canopy closure after tree-stand regeneration[16]

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