Quantifying determinants contributing to plant species richness in mosaic landscapes : a single-and multi-patch perspective

Despite good theoretical knowledge about determinants of plant species richness in mosaic landscapes, validations based on complete surveys are scarce. We conducted a case study in a highly fragmented, traditional agricultural landscape. In 199 patches of 20 representative multi-patch-plots (MPPs, 1...

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Veröffentlicht in:Landscape ecology 2006-11, Vol.21 (8), p.1233-1251
Hauptverfasser: SIMMERING, Dietmar, WALDHARDT, Rainer, OTTE, Annette
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container_title Landscape ecology
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creator SIMMERING, Dietmar
WALDHARDT, Rainer
OTTE, Annette
description Despite good theoretical knowledge about determinants of plant species richness in mosaic landscapes, validations based on complete surveys are scarce. We conducted a case study in a highly fragmented, traditional agricultural landscape. In 199 patches of 20 representative multi-patch-plots (MPPs, 1 ha) we recorded a total of 371 plant species. In addition to an additive partitioning of species diversity at the (a) patch- and (b) MPP-scale, we adopted the recently proposed 'specificity' measure to quantify the contribution of a spatial subunit to landscape species richness (subunit-to-landscape-contribution, SLC). SLC-values were calculated at both scales with respect to various spatial extents. General regression models were used to quantify the relative importance of hypothesis-driven determinants for species richness and SLC-values. At the patch scale, habitat type was the main determinant of species richness, followed by area and elongated shape. For SLC-values, area was more important than habitat type, and its relevance increased with the extent of the considered landscape. Influences of elongated shape and vegetation context were minor. Differences between habitat types were pronounced for species richness and also partly scale-dependent for SLC-values. Relevant predictors at the MPP-scale were nonlinear habitat richness, the gradient from anthropogenic to seminatural vegetation, and the proportions of natural vegetation and rare habitats. Linear elements and habitat configuration did not contribute to species richness and SLC. Results at the MPP-scale were in complete accordance with the predictions of the mosaic concept. Hence, our study represents its first empirical validation for plant species diversity in mosaic landscapes.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10980-006-0027-6
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subjects Agricultural land
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Anthropogenic factors
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Birds
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Flowers & plants
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General aspects
Habitats
Natural vegetation
Plant diversity
Plant species
Species diversity
Species richness
Traditional farming
title Quantifying determinants contributing to plant species richness in mosaic landscapes : a single-and multi-patch perspective
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