Landscape-scale habitat fragmentation is positively related to biodiversity, despite patch-scale ecosystem decay.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_7D950025DDEA
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Letter (letter): Communication to the publisher.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Landscape-scale habitat fragmentation is positively related to biodiversity, despite patch-scale ecosystem decay.
Journal
Ecology letters
Author(s)
Riva F., Fahrig L.
ISSN
1461-0248 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1461-023X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
02/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
26
Number
2
Pages
268-277
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Letter
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Positive effects of habitat patch size on biodiversity are often extrapolated to infer negative effects of habitat fragmentation on biodiversity at landscape scales. However, such cross-scale extrapolations typically fail. A recent, landmark, patch-scale analysis (Chase et al., 2020, Nature 584, 238-243) demonstrates positive patch size effects on biodiversity, that is, 'ecosystem decay' in small patches. Other authors have already extrapolated this result to infer negative fragmentation effects, that is, higher biodiversity in a few large than many small patches of the same cumulative habitat area. We test whether this extrapolation is valid. We find that landscape-scale patterns are opposite to their analogous patch-scale patterns: for sets of patches with equal total habitat area, species richness and evenness decrease with increasing mean size of the patches comprising that area, even when considering only species of conservation concern. Preserving small habitat patches will, therefore, be key to sustain biodiversity amidst ongoing environmental crises.
Keywords
Ecosystem, Biodiversity, Longitudinal Studies, 2050 vision for biodiversity, IUCN Red List, Post-2020 biodiversity targets, biodiversity conservation, ecological complexity, extrapolation, habitat fragmentation per se, scale
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
12/12/2022 12:15
Last modification date
31/10/2023 8:09
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