More losses than gains during one century of plant biodiversity change in Germany.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_3582A32028D4
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
More losses than gains during one century of plant biodiversity change in Germany.
Journal
Nature
Author(s)
Jandt U., Bruelheide H., Jansen F., Bonn A., Grescho V., Klenke R.A., Sabatini F.M., Bernhardt-Römermann M., Blüml V., Dengler J., Diekmann M., Doerfler I., Döring U., Dullinger S., Haider S., Heinken T., Horchler P., Kuhn G., Lindner M., Metze K., Müller N., Naaf T., Peppler-Lisbach C., Poschlod P., Roscher C., Rosenthal G., Rumpf S.B., Schmidt W., Schrautzer J., Schwabe A., Schwartze P., Sperle T., Stanik N., Storm C., Voigt W., Wegener U., Wesche K., Wittig B., Wulf M.
ISSN
1476-4687 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0028-0836
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
611
Number
7936
Pages
512-518
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Long-term analyses of biodiversity data highlight a 'biodiversity conservation paradox': biological communities show substantial species turnover over the past century <sup>1,2</sup> , but changes in species richness are marginal <sup>1,3-5</sup> . Most studies, however, have focused only on the incidence of species, and have not considered changes in local abundance. Here we asked whether analysing changes in the cover of plant species could reveal previously unrecognized patterns of biodiversity change and provide insights into the underlying mechanisms. We compiled and analysed a dataset of 7,738 permanent and semi-permanent vegetation plots from Germany that were surveyed between 2 and 54 times from 1927 to 2020, in total comprising 1,794 species of vascular plants. We found that decrements in cover, averaged across all species and plots, occurred more often than increments; that the number of species that decreased in cover was higher than the number of species that increased; and that decrements were more equally distributed among losers than were gains among winners. Null model simulations confirmed that these trends do not emerge by chance, but are the consequence of species-specific negative effects of environmental changes. In the long run, these trends might result in substantial losses of species at both local and regional scales. Summarizing the changes by decade shows that the inequality in the mean change in species cover of losers and winners diverged as early as the 1960s. We conclude that changes in species cover in communities represent an important but understudied dimension of biodiversity change that should more routinely be considered in time-series analyses.
Keywords
Biodiversity, Germany, Plants/classification, Species Specificity, Time Factors, Datasets as Topic
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
24/10/2022 12:14
Last modification date
30/09/2023 6:55
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