Abstract

The study describes an analysis of the impact of plantation forestry on the taxonomic diversity of plants in south-central Chile. In this biodiversity hotspot, plantations of non-native species like Pinus radiata D. Don, Eucalyptus globules Labill. and Populus nigra L. have largely replaced native deciduous and sclerophyllous forests. The study compares taxonomic diversity of commercial plantations and native forests using taxonomic distinctness and diversity and the Simpson diversity index. Most of these indexes attest a considerably reduced taxonomic diversity to plantations. However, taxonomic distinctness values for P. radiata plantations seem to contradict other indexes at first glance. It is shown that the higher values of taxonomic distinctness of P. radiata plantations come from taxonomic dominance. Taxonomic dominance describes the fact that P. radiate—a member of the infradivison of Gymnospermae-bears only little taxonomic resemblance to other plants, which are Angiospermae. Thus, it strongly dominates the taxonomic distinctness index and the high taxonomic resemblance of other plant within its plots is neglected. Indexes are developed that identify such dominant species and adjust for taxonomic dominance in taxonomic diversity analyses. After this adjustment, all indexes provide a coherent image on taxonomic diversity. Plantation forestry produces a considerable decline of taxonomic diversity. Taxonomic diversity analysis provides valuable insights in biodiversity impacts and complements standard analyses.

Highlights

  • The coastal range of south-central Chile has experienced a rapid and intense transformation of land-use since the arrival of European colonists [1]-[5]

  • This study analyses the impact of plantation forestry on plant biodiversity in south-central Chile by comparing taxonomic diversity in plantations and native forests

  • That numbers of taxa in taxonomic ranks, taxonomic diversity based on species frequencies in all plots, taxonomic distinctness based on relative abundances in individual plots and Simpson diversity values are all remarkably reduced within plantations

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Summary

Introduction

The coastal range of south-central Chile has experienced a rapid and intense transformation of land-use since the arrival of European colonists [1]-[5]. Land-use transformation has accelerated even more since the neoliberal turn during the Pinochet era until today. Within this period, forest plantations with commercial purposes have significantly been extended [6]-[8]. During the neoliberal turn, plantation forestry, vigorously subsidized by the government, has extended spatially. This extension caused rapid and spacious deforestation of deciduous Nothofagus spp. Taxonomic diversity extends the species-oriented perspective of traditional biodiversity assessments and incorporates higher taxonomic ranks into the analysis

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