Abstract

Most island-ecology studies focus on the properties of entire island communities, thus neglecting species-environment relationships operating at the habitat-level. Habitat-specific variation in the strength and sign of these relationships will conceal patterns observed on the island scale and may preclude a mechanistic interpretation of patterns and processes. Habitat-specific species-environment relationships may also depend on the descriptor of ecological communities. This paper presents a comprehensive plot-based analysis of local vegetation composition and species diversity (species richness and species evenness) of (i) rocky shore, (ii) semi-natural grassland and (iii) coniferous forest habitats in three Baltic archipelagos in Sweden. To identify differences and consistencies between habitats and descriptors, we assessed the relative contributions of the variable-sets “region”, “topography”, “soil morphology”, “soil fertility”, “soil water”, “light availability”, “distance” and “island configuration” on local vegetation composition, species richness and species evenness. We quantified the impact of “management history” on the descriptors of local grassland communities by a newly introduced grazing history index (GHI). Unlike species diversity, changes in vegetation composition were related to most of the variable-sets. The relative contributions of the variable-sets were mostly habitat-specific and strongly contingent on the descriptor involved. Within each habitat, richness and evenness were only partly affected by the same variable-sets, and if so, their relative contribution varied between diversity proxies. Across all habitats, soil variable-sets showed highly consistent effects on vegetation composition and species diversity and contributed most to the variance explained. GHI was a powerful predictor, explaining high proportions of variation in all three descriptors of grassland species communities. The proportion of unexplained variance was habitat-specific, possibly reflecting a community maturity gradient. Our results reveal that species richness alone is an incomplete representation of local species diversity. Finally, we stress the need of including habitat-based approaches when analyzing complex species-environment relationships on islands.

Highlights

  • Islands world-wide are increasingly exposed to human pressure, global climate change and invasive species [1], which affect insular plant communities

  • We examined the relative contributions of the same sets of environmental variables on local vegetation composition, species richness and species evenness in the habitats (i) rocky shore, (ii) semi-natural grassland and (iii) coniferous forest

  • We found that the number of potential predictors and their relative contributions in explaining changes in the Vegetation composition and species diversity—Responses across insular habitats response matrix differed markedly, depending on whether the focus was on vegetation composition or species diversity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Islands world-wide are increasingly exposed to human pressure, global climate change and invasive species [1], which affect insular plant communities. Associated changes of the major descriptors of plant communities, i.e. vegetation composition, species richness and species evenness, may have cascading effects on ecosystem properties [2]. Island plant community vulnerability towards environmental changes largely depends on the descriptor involved and responses may vary idiosyncratically among habitat types [2,3]. [6,7,8]), omitting potential differences between various insular habitats or vegetation types This may bias the analysis of insular plant community responses to changing environmental conditions. A bottom-up perspective considering different island habitats is urgently needed. This knowledge is imperative for biodiversity management, and to predict possible impacts of environmental change on insular plant communities

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.