• Title of article

    Disentangling community assemblages to depict an indicator of biological connectivity: A regional study of fragmented semi-natural grasslands

  • Author/Authors

    Gil-Tena، نويسنده , , Assu and Lecerf، نويسنده , , Rémi and Ernoult، نويسنده , , Aude، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    48
  • To page
    55
  • Abstract
    Under the current context of global change that largely threatens overall biodiversity in increasingly fragmented landscapes, more insights are needed into the drivers of biological connectivity between communities (i.e. the flow of species among a set of local communities responding to landscape structure). This study aims at estimating an indicator of regional biological connectivity of semi-natural grasslands from the expected correlation between the degree of community assemblage (i.e. composition similarity) and landscape features directly related to dispersal among local communities. Large-scale plant distributions characterizing semi-natural grassland communities were gathered from the atlas of Brittany flora (NW France; UTM grid of 10 km × 10 km). The analysed variables were computed considering the focal UTM square and its immediate neighbours, and the modelling encompassed different regression techniques accounting for spatial autocorrelation [Simultaneous Autoregressive (SAR) error models] and non-stationarity [Geographically Weighted Regressions (GWR)]. gree of community assemblage allocated to biological connectivity was 10.4% (adjusted-R2); it was mainly correlated to decreasing hedgerow length and secondly to increasing structural connectivity of semi-natural grasslands once spatial autocorrelation was accounted for. The estimation of the indicator of biological connectivity (0.05 ± 0.01 from the SAR models) were improved when considering non-stationarity issues, particularly for the Eastern part of Brittany (up to 0.12 in terms of biological connectivity). Overall, the proposed indicator and estimation methodology represent a step ahead in connectivity analysis at the community level, potentially relevant in the detection of hotspots of biological connectivity which can help buffer current large-scale biodiversity threats due to global change.
  • Keywords
    spatial autocorrelation , Equivalent connected area , Brittany , Similarity , Hedgerows , Stationarity
  • Journal title
    Ecological Indicators
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Ecological Indicators
  • Record number

    2092581