Data from: Vascular plant species richness and bioindication predict multi‐taxon species richness
Plants regulate soils and microclimate, provide substrate for heterotrophic taxa, are easy to observe and identify and have a stable taxonomy, which strongly justifies their use as indicators in monitoring and conservation. However, there is no consensus as to whether plants are strong predictors of...
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Zusammenfassung: | Plants regulate soils and microclimate, provide substrate for
heterotrophic taxa, are easy to observe and identify and have a stable
taxonomy, which strongly justifies their use as indicators in monitoring
and conservation. However, there is no consensus as to whether plants are
strong predictors of total multi‐taxon species richness. In this study, we
investigate if general terrestrial species richness can be predicted by
vascular plant richness and bioindication. To answer this question, we
collected an extensive dataset on species richness of vascular plants,
bryophytes, macrofungi, lichens, plant‐galling arthropods, gastropods,
spiders, carabid beetles, hoverflies, and genetic richness (operational
taxonomic units = OTUs) from environmental DNA metabarcoding. We also
constructed a Conservation Index based on threatened red list species.
Besides using richness of vascular plants for prediction of other
taxonomic groups, we also used plant‐derived calibration of the abiotic
environment (moisture, soil fertility and light conditions) as well as the
degree of anthropogenic impact. Bivariate relationships between plant
species richness and other species groups showed no consistent pattern.
After taking environmental calibration by bioindication into account, we
found a consistent, and for most groups significant, positive effect of
plant richness. Plant species richness was also important for richness of
fungal OTUs, Malaise OTUs and for the Conservation Index. Our multiple
regression analyses revealed (a) a consistently positive effect of plant
richness on other taxa, (b) prediction of 12%–55% of variation in other
taxa and 48% of variation in the total species richness when bioindication
and plant richness were used as predictors. Our results justify that
vascular plants are strong indicators of total biodiversity across
environmental gradients and broad taxonomic realms and therefore a natural
first choice for biodiversity monitoring and conservation planning. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.m9j79jr |