Title of article
Nested plant and fungal communities; the importance of area and habitat quality in maximizing species capture in boreal old-growth forests Original Research Article
Author/Authors
H?kan Berglund، نويسنده , , Bengt Gunnar Jonsson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
10
From page
319
To page
328
Abstract
Knowledge of the distribution of rare species is crucial for species conservation in fragmented habitats. Species communities often exhibit nestedness, i.e. species in species-poor sites comprise a subset of richer ones. Thus, rare species are confined to species-rich sites. We evaluate whether plant and fungal communities in 46 old-growth spruce forest patches (0.17–12 ha) exhibit nestedness. The question whether a single large patch or several small patches capture most species (i.e. the SLOSS-issue) is evaluated in combination with species saturation analyses. All species groups exhibited significant nestedness. Area was generally related to nestedness, i.e. rare species were over-represented in the largest patches. Species saturation analysis indicated that large patches accumulated more Red-list species in patch interiors than small patches. Thus, rare and Red-list species were best captured in large patches. However, nestedness also emerged in equal sized sample plots, i.e. rare species were over-represented in high quality habitats. Thus, small habitats of high quality should not be neglected in a conservation perspective.
Keywords
Bryophytes , lichens , Mosaic , Sweden , Species–area relationship
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
836579
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