scholarly journals Beta diversity of stream insects differs between boreal and subtropical regions, but land use does not generally cause biotic homogenization

2020 ◽  
pp. 000-000
Author(s):  
Danielle K. Petsch ◽  
Victor S. Saito ◽  
Victor L. Landeiro ◽  
Thiago S. F. Silva ◽  
Luis M. Bini ◽  
...  
Ecology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 705-715 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Murphy ◽  
Lívia D. Audino ◽  
James Whitacre ◽  
Jenalle L. Eck ◽  
John W. Wenzel ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (16) ◽  
pp. 3786-3798 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Makiola ◽  
Ian A. Dickie ◽  
Robert J. Holdaway ◽  
Jamie R. Wood ◽  
Kate H. Orwin ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 105605 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kishor Sharma ◽  
Bhoj Kumar Acharya ◽  
Ghanashyam Sharma ◽  
Donatella Valente ◽  
Maria Rita Pasimeni ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Merdas Saifi ◽  
Yacine Kouba ◽  
Tewfik Mostephaoui ◽  
Yassine Farhi ◽  
Haroun Chenchouni

Despite many studies explored the effect of livestock grazing on plant communities, the response of species composition and diversity to livestock grazing in arid rangelands remain ambiguous. This study examined the effects of livestock grazing on plant communities in arid steppe rangelands of North Africa. Plant diversity of annual species, perennial species and all species combined was measured and compared between grazed and grazing-excluded areas. We also examined the relative importance of species turnover and community nestedness. Moreover, the effects of livestock grazing on beta diversity at local among transects and landscape among sites scales were examined using the multiplicative diversity partitioning. Results revealed that livestock grazing significantly decreased the alpha diversity of all species combined and the diversity of annual plants. Livestock grazing induced a shift in plant community composition where most of species composition variation (~74%) was due to infrequent species replacement ‘turnover’ between the two management types rather than nestedness (~26%). Results revealed also that among transects, beta diversity was higher in grazed steppes than in grazing-excluded steppes. Whereas, among sites, beta diversity was lower in grazed steppes compared to grazing-excluded steppes. These findings suggest that livestock grazing in arid steppe rangelands increases the variation in plant species composition at a local spatial scale and engenders vegetation homogeneity at landscape spatial scale. Therefore, the implementation of appropriate management practices such as short-term grazing exclusion is mandatory to prevent these ecosystems from large scale biotic homogenization.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob B. Socolar ◽  
Elvis H. Valderrama Sandoval ◽  
David S. Wilcove

ABSTRACTDiversified smallholder agriculture is the main human land-use affecting the western Amazon, home to the world’s richest terrestrial biota, but the scant available data to date have suggested that the biodiversity impacts of this land-use are small. Here, we present comprehensive surveys of birds and trees in primary forest and smallholder agricultural mosaics in northern Peru. These surveys reveal substantial biodiversity losses that have been overlooked by other studies. Avian biodiversity losses arise primarily from biotic homogenization across infrequently surveyed forest habitats (a loss of beta-diversity). Furthermore, tree species richness declines much more steeply than bird richness. Statistical modeling of local habitat features that allow forest-associated species to persist in the smallholder mosaic strongly suggests that our results represent a best-case scenario for Amazonian agricultural biodiversity. We conclude that previous assessments of the biodiversity value of Amazonian smallholder agriculture have been overly optimistic because they are restricted to upland habitat, thereby missing losses in beta diversity; do not evaluate trees; and/or rely on generalizations from less speciose areas of the Neotropics, where habitat specialization amongst species is less prevalent. Smallholder agriculture will likely expand in western Amazonia due to infrastructure development, and it must be seen as a serious threat to the region’s biodiversity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph P. Wayman ◽  
Jonathan P. Sadler ◽  
Thomas A. M. Pugh ◽  
Thomas E. Martin ◽  
Joseph A. Tobias ◽  
...  

Spatial variation in community composition may be driven by a variety of processes, including environmental filtering and dispersal limitation. While work has been conducted on the relative importance of these processes on various taxa and at varying resolutions, tests using high-resolution empirical data across large spatial extents are sparse. Here, we use a dataset on the presence/absence of breeding bird species collected at the 10 km × 10 km scale across the whole of Britain. Pairwise spatial taxonomic and functional beta diversity, and the constituent components of each (turnover and nestedness/richness loss or gain), were calculated alongside two other measures of functional change (mean nearest taxon distance and mean pairwise distance). Predictor variables included climate and land use measures, as well as a measure of elevation, human influence, and habitat diversity. Generalized dissimilarity modeling was used to analyze the contribution of each predictor variable to variation in the different beta diversity metrics. Overall, we found that there was a moderate and unique proportion of the variance explained by geographical distance per se, which could highlight the role of dispersal limitation in community dissimilarity. Climate, land use, and human influence all also contributed to the observed patterns, but a large proportion of the explained variance in beta diversity was shared between these variables and geographical distance. However, both taxonomic nestedness and functional nestedness were uniquely predicted by a combination of land use, human influence, elevation, and climate variables, indicating a key role for environmental filtering. These findings may have important conservation implications in the face of a warming climate and future land use change.


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