HOME
ABOUT SCALES
PUBLICATIONS
POLICY AND USER'S CORNER
RELATED PROJECTS
MEDIA CENTRE
NEWS
EVENTS
JOBS
CONTACT US
SCALETOOL



Article alert: Contrasting effects of habitat area and connectivity on evenness of pollinator communities
16.01.2014

Ecography. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2013.00369.x

Marini, L., Öckinger, E., Bergman, K.-O., Jauker, B., Krauss, J., Kuussaari, M., Pöyry, J., Smith, H. G., Steffan-Dewenter, I. and Bommarco, R.

Losses of both habitat area and connectivity have been identified as important drivers of species richness declines, but little theoretical and empirical work exists that addresses the effect of fragmentation on relative commonness of highly mobile species such as pollinating insects. With a large dataset of wild bee and butterfly abundances collected across Europe, we first tested the effect of habitat area and connectivity on evenness in pollinator communities using a large array of indexes that give different weight to dominance and rarity. Second, we tested if traits related to mobility and diet breadth could explain the observed evenness patterns. We found a clear negative effect of area and a weaker, but positive effect of connectivity on evenness. Communities in small habitat fragments were mainly composed of mobile and generalist species. The higher evenness in small fragments could thereby be generated by highly mobile species that maintain local populations with frequent inter-fragment movements. Trait analysis suggested an increasing importance of dispersal over local recruitment, as we move from large to small fragments and from less to more connected fragments. Species richness and evenness were negatively correlated indicating that the two variables responded differently to habitat area and connectivity, although the mechanisms underlying the observed patterns are difficult to isolate. Even though habitat area and connectivity often decrease simultaneously due to habitat fragmentation, an interesting practical implication of the contrasting effect of the two variables is that the resulting community composition will depend on the relative strength of these two processes.


See Attached files here:
Web Page Contrasting effects of habitat area and connectivity on evenness of pollinator communities
all news »





05.03.2022
New paper published: Sampling and modelling rare species: Conceptual guidelines for the neglected majority

Jeliazkov, A., Gavish, Y., Marsh, C. J., Geschke, J., Brummitt, N., Rocchini, D., Haase, P.,...
06.12.2020
New paper published: A GIS-based policy support tool to determine national responsibilities and priorities for biodiversity conservation

Lin YP, Schmeller DS, Ding TS, Wang YC, Lien WY, Henle K, Klenke RA (2020) A GIS-based polic...
all news »


 
© 2024 SCALES. All rights reserved. Created and maintained by Pensoft