Data from: Tracking global change using lichen diversity: towards a global-scale ecological indicator
Lichens have been used to efficiently track major drivers of global change from the local to regional scale since the beginning of the industrial revolution (sulphur dioxide) to the present (nitrogen deposition and climate change). Currently, the challenge is to universalize monitoring methodologies...
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Zusammenfassung: | Lichens have been used to efficiently track major drivers of global change
from the local to regional scale since the beginning of the industrial
revolution (sulphur dioxide) to the present (nitrogen deposition and
climate change). Currently, the challenge is to universalize monitoring
methodologies to compare global change drivers’ simultaneous and
independent effects on ecosystems and to assess the efficacy of mitigation
measures. Because two protocols are now used at a continental scale North
America (US) and Europe (EU), it is timely to investigate the
compatibility of the interpretation of their outcomes. For the first time,
we present an analytical framework to compare the interpretation of data
sets coming from these methods utilizing broadly accepted biodiversity
metrics, featuring a paired data set from the US Pacific Northwest. The
methodologies yielded highly similar interpretation trends between
response metrics: taxonomic diversity, functional diversity and community
composition shifts in response to two major drivers of global change
(nitrogen deposition and climate). A framework was designed to incorporate
surrogates of species richness (the most commonly used empirical trend in
taxonomic diversity), shifts in species composition (compositional
turnover) and metrics of functional diversity (link between community
shifts to effects and ecosystem structure and functioning). These metrics
are essential to more thoroughly comprehend biodiversity response to
global change. Its inclusion in this framework enables future
cross-continental analysis of lichen biodiversity change from North
America and Europe in response to global change. Future works should focus
on developing independent metrics for response to global change drivers,
namely climate and pollution, taking us one step closer to a lichen-based
global ecological indicator. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.86h2k |