| Literature DB >> 30932319 |
Zsófia Horváth1,2, Robert Ptacnik1, Csaba F Vad1, Jonathan M Chase2,3.
Abstract
When habitats are lost, species are lost in the region as a result of the sampling process. However, it is less clear what happens to biodiversity in the habitats that remain. Some have argued that the main influence of habitat loss on biodiversity is simply due to the total amount of habitat being reduced, while others have argued that fragmentation leads to fewer species per site because of altered spatial connectance among extant habitats. Here, we use a unique data set on invertebrate species in ponds spanning six decades of habitat loss to show that both regional and local species richness declined, indicating that species loss is compounded by habitat loss via connectivity loss, and not a result of a sampling process or changes in local environmental conditions. Overall, our work provides some of the clearest evidence to date from a longitudinal study that habitat loss translates into species loss, even within the remaining habitats.Entities:
Keywords: Extinction; fragmentation; habitat connectivity; landscape connectance
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30932319 PMCID: PMC6518933 DOI: 10.1111/ele.13260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492
Figure 1Habitat loss since the 1950s. The location of our study area in eastern Austria (a). Original habitats in 1950s (circles; b) and remaining habitats today (filled circles). Comparison of a smaller part of the region in 1950s (c; with five soda pans) and today (d; with only two remaining soda pans) on aerial photographs.
Figure 2Temporal changes in regional richness based on the number (a) and area (b) of sampled habitats. Regional richness in the larger data set was predicted at a sample size of 30 ponds (number of ponds in the smaller data set from 2010; a) and at an area of 488.75 ha (size of total area in 2010; b). Confidence intervals were calculated based on quantile regression.
Figure 3Regional extinction probability is higher for regionally rare species. In a binomial GLM model, habitat occupancy (i.e. the proportion of habitats occupied in 1957) was far more important in explaining the identity of regionally lost species than their habitat preference (salinity) or body size (a). All species that went extinct over six decades occupied less than 30% of the original habitats in 1950s (b; scale of habitat occupancy axis is square root transformed).
Figure 4Temporal changes in local species richness (a) and β‐diversity (b). Effect size () gives the average absolute difference between the two time periods.
Figure 5Drivers of changes in local species richness. Habitat loss via connectivity loss had a stronger effect on changes in local species richness than salinity or area change (a). Within ponds, the change in local species richness over the time period was negatively related to the amount of connectivity a given pond lost (b).