Title of article
Indicator species and the problem of spatial inconsistency in nestedness patterns Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Magne Saetersdal، نويسنده , , Ivar Gjerde، نويسنده , , Hans H. Blom، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
12
From page
305
To page
316
Abstract
The potential as indicators of species richness were investigated for 178 species belonging to six ecologically defined species groups (epiphytic bryophytes on nutrient-rich bark, epiphytic macrolichens on nutrient rich bark, pendant lichens on conifer trees, bryophytes on siliceous rocks, bryophytes on dead conifer wood, and polypore fungi on dead conifer wood), using species data from 0.25 ha plots from three different coniferous forest areas (ca. 200 ha each). A species was defined as a potential indicator species for a species group within a study area if its distribution was statistically significantly nested within the species-plot matrix ranked according to species richness, and if the plot frequency of the species was less than 25%.
Only two species were identified as potential indicators within all three areas and on average ≈80% of the potential indicator species were lost from one area to another. The results indicate that inconsistency between areas in the species’ frequency distributions and their position in nested hierarchies may strongly reduce the general predictive power of indicator species of species richness, even if significantly nested patterns are found at the community level. We suggest that indicators related to amount and quality of habitats may be an alternative to lists of indicator species of species richness.
Keywords
Bryophytes , fungi , Indicator species , lichens , conservation
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
837112
Link To Document