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Pervasive effects of dispersal limitation on within- and among-community species richness in agricultural landscapes

Authors :
Hendrickx, F.
Maelfait, J.P.
Desender, K.
Aviron, S.
Bailey, D.
Diekotter, T.
Lens, L.
Liira, J.
Schweiger, Oliver
Speelmans, M.
Vandomme, V.
Bugter, R.
Hendrickx, F.
Maelfait, J.P.
Desender, K.
Aviron, S.
Bailey, D.
Diekotter, T.
Lens, L.
Liira, J.
Schweiger, Oliver
Speelmans, M.
Vandomme, V.
Bugter, R.
Source :
ISSN: 1466-822X
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Aim To determine whether the effect of habitat fragmentation and habitat heterogeneity on species richness at different spatial scales depends on the dispersal ability of the species assemblages and if this results in nested species assemblages. Location Agricultural landscapes distributed over seven temperate Europe countries covering a range from France to Estonia. Methods We sampled 16 local communities in each of 24 agricultural landscapes (16 km(2)) that differ in the amount and heterogeneity of semi-natural habitat patches. Carabid beetles were used as model organisms as dispersal ability can easily be assessed on morphological traits. The proximity and heterogeneity of semi-natural patches within the landscape were related to average local (alpha), between local (beta) and landscape (gamma) species richness and compared among four guilds that differ in dispersal ability. Results For species assemblages with low dispersal ability, local diversity increased as the proximity of semi-natural habitat increased, while mobile species showed an opposite trend. Beta diversity decreased equally for all dispersal classes in relation to proximity, suggesting a homogenizing effect of increased patch isolation. In contrast, habitat diversity of the semi-natural patches affected beta diversity positively only for less mobile species, probably due to the low dispersal ability of specialist species. Species with low mobility that persisted in highly fragmented landscapes were consistently present in less fragmented ones, resulting in nested assemblages for this mobility class only. Main conclusions The incorporation of dispersal ability reveals that only local species assemblages with low dispersal ability show a decrease of richness as a result of fragmentation. This local species loss is compensated at least in part by an increase in species with high dispersal ability, which obscures the effect of fragmentation when investigated across dispersal groups. Conversely, fragmen

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 1466-822X
Notes :
ISSN: 1466-822X, Global Ecology and Biogeography 18 (5);; 607 - 616, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1405992195
Document Type :
Electronic Resource