Details zur Publikation

Kategorie Textpublikation
Referenztyp Zeitschriften
DOI 10.1111/ddi.13058
Lizenz creative commons licence
Titel (primär) Using incomplete floristic monitoring data from habitat mapping programmes to detect species trends
Autor Bruelheide, H.; Jansen, F.; Jandt, U.; Bernhardt-Römermann, M.; Bonn, A. ORCID logo ; Bowler, D.; Dengler, J.; Eichenberg, D.; Grescho, V.; Harter, D.; Jugelt, M.; Kellner, S.; Ludwig, M.; Wesche, K.; Lütt, S.
Quelle Diversity and Distributions
Erscheinungsjahr 2020
Department iDiv; ESS
Band/Volume 26
Heft 7
Seite von 782
Seite bis 794
Sprache englisch
Supplements https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1111%2Fddi.13058&file=ddi13058-sup-0001-supinfo.docx
Keywords Beals' index; biodiversity change; Ellenberg indicator value; flower colour; Germany; biotope mapping; insect-pollinated plants; nectar supply; plant species; resurvey
Abstract

Aim

The loss of biodiversity has raised serious concerns about the entailing losses of ecosystem services. Here, we explore the potential of repeated habitat mapping data to identify floristic changes over time. Using one German federal state as a case study, we assessed floristic changes between the 1980s and 2010s. These habitat data have great potential for analysis because of their high spatial coverage while also posing methodological challenges such as incomplete observation data. We developed a modelling approach that accounts for incomplete observations and explored the ability to detect temporal trends.

Location

The Federal State of Schleswig‐Holstein (Germany)

Methods

We compiled plant species lists from the earliest (1980s) and most recent (2010s) habitat mapping survey and aligned differing habitat definitions across mapping campaigns. A total of 5,503 mapped polygons, each with a list of species records, intersected the two surveys. We accounted for underrecorded species by assigning occurrence probabilities, based on species co‐occurrence information across all surveys, using Beals' index and tested the robustness of this approach by simulation experiments. For those species with significant increases and decreases in occurrence probability, we linked these trends to the species' functional characteristics.

Results

We found a systematic loss of species that are moderately threatened. Species that indicate low nitrogen supply and high soil moisture declined, suggesting a shift towards a more eutrophic and drier landscape. Importantly, assessing specific plant traits associated with losses, we also detected a decrease in species with reddish and blueish flowers and species providing nectar, pointing to a decrease of insect‐pollinated taxa.

Main conclusions

The identified changes raise concerns that plant biodiversity has fundamentally changed over the last three decades, with concomitant consequences for ecosystem services, especially pollination. Given the general lack of historical standardized data, our approach for trend analyses using incomplete observation data may be widely applicable to assess long‐term biodiversity change.

dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=22953
Bruelheide, H., Jansen, F., Jandt, U., Bernhardt-Römermann, M., Bonn, A., Bowler, D., Dengler, J., Eichenberg, D., Grescho, V., Harter, D., Jugelt, M., Kellner, S., Ludwig, M., Wesche, K., Lütt, S. (2020):
Using incomplete floristic monitoring data from habitat mapping programmes to detect species trends
Divers. Distrib. 26 (7), 782 - 794