Alpha diversity of vascular plants in European forests

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Authors

VEČEŘA Martin DIVÍŠEK Jan LENOIR Jonathan JIMÉNEZ ALFARO Borja BIURRUN Idoia KNOLLOVÁ Ilona AGRILLO Emiliano CAMPOS Juan Antonio ČARNI Andraž JIMÉNEZ Guillermo Crespo ĆUK Mirjana DIMOPOULOS Panayotis EWALD Jörg GONZÁLEZ Federico Fernández GÉGOUT Jean Claude INDREICA Adrian JANDT Ute JANSEN Florian KĄCKI Zygmunt RAŠOMAVIČIUS Valerijus ŘEZNÍČKOVÁ Marcela RODWELL John S SCHAMINÉE Joop H J ŠILC Urban SVENNING Jens Christian SWACHA Grzegorz VASSILEV Kiril VENANZONI Roberto WILLNER Wolfgang WOHLGEMUTH Thomas CHYTRÝ Milan

Year of publication 2019
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of Biogeography
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jbi.13624
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13624
Keywords diversity; Europe; European Vegetation Archive; forest vegetation; plant community; predictive modelling; Random Forests; species richness patterns; vascular plants; vegetation plot database
Attached files
Description Aim: The former continental–scale studies modelled coarse–grained plant species–richness patterns (gamma diversity). Here we aim to refine this information for European forests by (a) modelling the number of vascular plant species that co–occur in local communities (alpha diversity) within spatial units of 400 m2; and (b) assessing the factors likely determining the observed spatial patterns in alpha diversity. - Location: Europe roughly within 12°W–30°E and 35–60°N. - Taxon: Vascular plants. - Methods: The numbers of co–occurring vascular plant species were counted in 73,134 georeferenced vegetation plots. Each plot was classified by an expert system into deciduous broadleaf, coniferous or sclerophyllous forest. Random Forest models were used to map and explain spatial patterns in alpha diversity for each forest type separately using 19 environmental, land–use and historical variables. - Results: Our models explained from 51.0% to 70.9% of the variation in forest alpha diversity. The modelled alpha–diversity pattern was dominated by a marked gradient from species–poor north–western to species–rich south–eastern Europe. The most prominent richness hotspots were identified in the Calcareous Alps and adjacent north–western Dinarides, the Carpathian foothills in Romania and the Western Carpathians in Slovakia. Energy–related factors, bedrock types and terrain ruggedness were identified as the main variables underlying the observed richness patterns. Alpha diversity increases especially with temperature seasonality in deciduous broadleaf forests, on limestone bedrock in coniferous forests and in areas with low annual actual evapotranspiration in sclerophyllous forests. - Main conclusions: We provide the first predictive maps and analyses of environmental factors driving the alpha diversity of vascular plants across European forests. Such information is important for the general understanding of European biodiversity. This study also demonstrates a high potential of vegetation–plot databases as sources for robust estimation of the number of vascular plant species that co–occur at fine spatial grains across large areas.
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