Abstract

Grassland biodiversity, including traditional rural biotopes maintained by traditional agricultural practices, has become threatened worldwide. Road verges have been suggested to be complementary or compensatory habitats for species inhabiting grasslands. Species co-occurrence patterns linked with species traits can be used to separate between the different mechanisms (stochasticity, environmental filtering, biotic interactions) behind community structure. Here, we study species co-occurrence networks and underlying mechanisms of ground beetle species (Carabidae) in three different managed grassland types (meadows, pastures, road verges, n = 12 in each type) in Central Finland. We aimed to find out whether road verges can be considered as compensatory to traditional rural biotopes (meadows and pastures). We found that stochasticity explained over 90% of the pairwise co-occurrences, and the non-random co-occurrences were best explained by environmental filtering, regardless of the grassland type. However, the identities and traits of the species showing non-random co-occurrences differed among the habitat types. Thus, environmental factors behind environmental filtering differ among the habitat types and are related to the site-specific characteristics and variation therein. This poses challenges to habitat management since the species’ response to management action may depend on the site-specific characteristics. Although road verges are not fully compensatory to meadows and pastures, the high similarity of species richness and the high level of shared species suggest that for carabids road verges may be corridors connecting the sparse network of the remaining traditional rural biotopes.

Highlights

  • Understanding processes structuring communities has been a longstanding core topic in ecology, and it is crucial to applied research such as conservation biology and habitat management

  • We focused on species co-occurrences of ground beetles (Carabidae) in three types of managed grasslands: meadows and pastures and road verges

  • We showed that different managed grassland types, albeit very similar in species richness (Komonen and Elo 2017) and sharing most species, have different species co-occurrence networks

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding processes structuring communities has been a longstanding core topic in ecology, and it is crucial to applied research such as conservation biology and habitat management. Communities may be structured by drift, dispersal and selection resulting from environmental or biotic factors (Vellend 2010). This has resulted in a wide interest in separating the effects of drift, dispersal as well as the two sources of selection, environmental filtering and biotic interactions on community structure (Ovaskainen et al 2010; Boulangeat et al 2012; Blois et al 2014; D’Amen et al 2018)

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