Relative importance of current and past landscape structure and local habitat conditions for plant species richness in dry grassland-like forest openings

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Abstract

In fragmented landscapes, plant species richness may depend not only on local habitat conditions but also on landscape structure. In addition, both present and past landscape structure may be important for species richness. There are, however, only a few studies that have investigated the relative importance of all of these factors. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of current and past landscape structures and habitat conditions on species richness at dry grassland-like forest openings in a forested landscape and to assess their relative importance for species richness. We analyzed information on past and present landscape structures using aerial photographs from 1938, 1973, 1988, 2000 and 2007. We calculated the area of each locality and its isolation in the present and in the past and the continuity of localities in GIS. At each locality, we recorded all vascular plant species (296 species in 110 forest openings) and information on abiotic conditions of the localities. We found that the current species richness of the forest openings was significantly determined by local habitat conditions as well as by landscape structure in the present and in the past. The highest species richness was observed on larger and more heterogeneous localities with rocks and shallow soils, which were already large and well connected to other localities in 1938. The changes in the landscape structure in the past can thus have strong effects on current species richness. Future studies attempting to understand determinants of species diversity in fragmented landscapes should also include data on past landscape structure, as it may in fact be more important than the present structure. © 2014 Husaková, Munzbergová.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Study area with all studied localities. Study area with all studied localities (gray) in Site of Community Importance (SCI) Týřov (49u589100 N, 13u489400 E) and the position of study area within the Czech Republic. The line defines the border of our study area. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0097110.g001
  • Figure 2. Definition of locality and its separation from the forest matrix.
  • Table 1. All studied variables enrolled in subsequent analyses.
  • Table 2. Means, medians, minima and maxima of species numbers (per locality) and the independent variables.
  • Figure 3. Distribution of forest openings in 1938, 1973, 1988, 2000 (red) in comparison with the current distribution –2007 (black).
  • Table 3. Numbers and mean areas of forest openings in each studied period in the past and in the present.
  • Figure 4. The effect of the substrate heterogeneity on species richness. The effect of the substrate heterogeneity at localities (Shannon diversity index of substrate types – rock, shallow soil, scree and deeper soil) on species richness (depicted as residuals of number of species with coordinates and all significant factors from the second analyses as covariates). P,0.0001; r = 0.255. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0097110.g004
  • Figure 5. The effect of the substrate on species richness. The effect of the substrate in sense of the proportion of different types of substrate (rock, shallow soil, scree and deeper soil) on species richness (depicted as residuals of number of species with coordinates as covariates). P = 0.0054; r = 0.245 for rock, p = 0.154; r = 0.128 for shallow soil, p = 0.0003; r =20.314 for scree and p=0.6813; r =20.037 for deeper soil. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0097110.g005

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APA

Husáková, I., & Münzbergová, Z. (2014). Relative importance of current and past landscape structure and local habitat conditions for plant species richness in dry grassland-like forest openings. PLoS ONE, 9(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097110

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