Range dynamics of mountain plants decrease with elevation.
Sabine B. Rumpf,Karl Hülber,Günther Klonner,Dietmar Moser,Martin Schütz,Johannes Wessely,Wolfgang Willner,Niklaus E. Zimmermann,Stefan Dullinger +8 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that, over recent decades, increases in abundance were more pronounced than range shifts, suggesting an in-filling process which decreases in intensity with increasing elevation.
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Abstract: Many studies report that mountain plant species are shifting upward in elevation. However, the majority of these reports focus on shifts of upper limits. Here, we expand the focus and simultaneously analyze changes of both range limits, optima, and abundances of 183 mountain plant species. We therefore resurveyed 1,576 vegetation plots first recorded before 1970 in the European Alps. We found that both range limits and optima shifted upward in elevation, but the most pronounced trend was a mean increase in species abundance. Despite huge species-specific variation, range dynamics showed a consistent trend along the elevational gradient: Both range limits and optima shifted upslope faster the lower they were situated historically, and species' abundance increased more for species from lower elevations. Traits affecting the species' dispersal and persistence capacity were not related to their range dynamics. Using indicator values to stratify species by their thermal and nutrient demands revealed that elevational ranges of thermophilic species tended to expand, while those of cold-adapted species tended to contract. Abundance increases were strongest for nutriphilous species. These results suggest that recent climate warming interacted with airborne nitrogen deposition in driving the observed dynamics. So far, the majority of species appear as "winners" of recent changes, yet "losers" are overrepresented among high-elevation, cold-adapted species with low nutrient demands. In the decades to come, high-alpine species may hence face the double pressure of climatic changes and novel, superior competitors that move up faster than they themselves can escape to even higher elevations.
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Regional uniqueness of tree species composition and response to forest loss and climate change
Nina van Tiel,Philipp Brun,Philipp Brun,Nina van Tiel,Philipp Brun,Nina van Tiel,Nina van Tiel,Nina van Tiel,Nina van Tiel,Philipp Brun,Philipp Brun +10 more
TL;DR: The regional uniqueness of tree species composition and its response to forest loss and climate change is characterized by complex taxonomic and phylogenetic gradients, restricted range of tree species, and differential impacts on forest biomes.
Solar Radiation Affects Bird Distributions but Not Elevational Shifts in European Mountains
Joséphine Couet,Emma-Liina Marjakangas,Andrea Santangeli,Pekka Niittynen,Benoit Fontaine,Sergi Herrando,John Atle Kalas,Åke Lindström,Dario Massimino,Marvin Moosmann,Benjamin Seaman,Laura Silva,Bård G. Stokke,Norbert Teufelbauer,Aleksi Lehikoinen +14 more
Abstract: ABSTRACT Aim Climate change is driving species towards higher elevations. While local shifts in elevation are well documented, patterns across entire mountain regions are less understood. On a local scale, abiotic factors, such as topography and solar radiation relating to microclimate, affect species distributions and can thus influence the rate of elevational shifts on mountain slopes. The impact of abiotic factors on biodiversity is evident, but range shift studies have mostly focused on groups of species with low mobility, such as plants. Location Across European mountain regions of the Alps, Pyrenees, Scandinavia and the United Kingdom. Time Period 2001–2021. Major Taxa Studied One hundred seventy‐seven bird species. Methods We adopted a cross‐scale community approach using abundance data to quantify the impact of the amount of solar radiation (measured as potential incoming solar radiation) on the mean elevational distribution and rate of elevational shifts of bird species in four European mountain regions. We modelled the impact of the amount of solar radiation using generalised linear mixed models. Results We found that bird species inhabit higher elevations in areas receiving more solar radiation. We also found that the mean elevations at which species occur moved uphill by 0.5 m/year between the periods 2001–2004 and 2018–2021 across Europe. However, this rate of elevational shifts was similar between areas receiving low, medium and high amounts of solar radiation. We observed variations in the rate of elevational shifts that were fastest in Scandinavia and the Alps, while no uphill shift was observed in the UK or the Pyrenees. Main Conclusions Our findings underscore the significance of abiotic factors, including solar radiation and climate change, driving, directly or indirectly, birds' elevational distributions. They also unveil consistent patterns of uphill shifts across different solar radiation regimes at a continental scale.
ReSurveyEurope: A database of resurveyed vegetation plots in Europe
Ilona Knollová,Milan Chytrý,Helge Bruelheide,Stefan Dullinger,Ute Jandt,Markus Bernhardt-Römermann,Idoia Biurrun,Francesco de Bello,Michael Glaser,Stephan M. Hennekens,Florian Jansen,Borja Jiménez-Alfaro,Daniel Kadaš,Ekin Kaplan,Klára Klinkovská,Bernd Lenzner,Harald Pauli,Marta Gaia Sperandii,K. Verheyen,Manuela Winkler,Otar Abdaladze,Svetlana Aćić,Alicia T. R. Acosta,Audrey Alignier,Christopher Andrews,Raphaël Arlettaz,Fabio Attorre,Irena Axmanová,Manuel Babbi,Lander Baeten,Jakub Baran,Elena Barni,J. Benito-Alonso,Christian Berg,Ariel Bergamini,Imre Berki,Steffen Boch,Barbara Bock,Frank Bode,Gianmaria Bonari,Karel Boublík,Andrea J. Britton,J. Brunet,Vanessa Bruzzaniti,Serge Buholzer,Sabina Burrascano,J. A. Campos,Bengt‐Göran Carlsson,Maria Laura Carranza,Tomáš Černý,Kévin Charmillot,Alessandro Chiarucci,Philippe Choler,Kryštof Chytrý,E. Corcket,Anikó Csecserits,M. Cutini,Marta Czarniecka-Wiera,Jiří Danihelka,Maria Carla de Francesco,Pieter De Frenne,Michele Di Musciano,Michele De Sanctis,B. Deák,Guillaume Decocq,Iwona Dembicz,J. Dengler,Valter Di Cecco,Jan Dick,M. Diekmann,Hartmut Dierschke,Thomas Dirnböck,Inken Doerfler,Jiří Doležal,Ute Döring,Tomasz Durak,Ciara O’ Dwyer,Rasmus Ejrnæs,Inna Ermakova,Brigitta Erschbamer,Giuliano Fanelli,María‐Rosa Fernández‐Calzado,Thomas Fickert,Andrea Fischer,M. Fischer,Kacper Foremnik,Jan Frouz,Ricardo García‐González,D. García‐Magro,I. García‐Mijangos,Rosario G. Gavilán,Mateja Germ,Dany Ghosn,Khatuna Gigauri,Jaroslav Gizela,Aleksandra Golob,Valentin Golub,Daniel Gómez-García,David Gowing,John-Arvid Grytnes,Behlül Güler,Alba Gutiérrez‐Girón,Peter Haase,Sylvia Haider,Michal Hájek,Melinda Halassy,M. Harasek,Werner Härdtle,Thilo Heinken,Alison Hester,Jean-Yves Humbert,Ricardo Ibáñez,Estela Illa,Bogdan Jaroszewicz,Kai Jensen,Anke Jentsch,Martin Jiroušek,Veronika Kalníková,Robert Kanka,Jutta Kapfer,George Kazakis,Janez Kermavnar,Stefan Kesting,Larisa Khanina,Elisabeth Kindermann,Marek Kotrík,Tomáš Koutecký,Łukasz Kozub,Gisbert Kuhn,Lado Kutnar,Dario La Montagna,Andrea Lamprecht,J. Lenoir,Jan Lepš,Christoph Leuschner,Juan Lorite,Bjarke Madsen,R. M. Ugarte,M. A. Malicki,Tuija Maliniemi,František Máliš,Alexander Maringer,Robert Marrs,Silvia Matesanz,Katrin Metze,Stefan Meyer,Jonathan Millett,Ruth J. Mitchell,Jesper Erenskjold Moeslund,Pavel Moiseev,Umberto Morra di Cella,Ondřej Mudrák,Frank Müller,Norbert Müller,Tobias Naaf,László Nagy,Francesca Napoleone,Juri Nascimbene,Jana Navrátilová,J. Ninot,Yu Jie Niu,S. Normand,Romà Ogaya,Vladimir G. Onipchenko,Anna Orczewska,Adrienne Ortmann-Ajkai,Robin J. Pakeman,Iker Pardo,Ricarda Pätsch,Robert K. Peet,Josep Peñuelas,Cord Peppler-Lisbach,Javier Pérez‐Hernández,Aaron Pérez-Haase,Alessandro Petraglia,Petr Petřík,Remigiusz Pielech,H. Piorkowski,Eulàlia Pladevall‐Izard,Peter Poschlod,Karel Prach,S. Praleskouskaya,Vadim Prokhorov,S. Provoost,Mihai Puşcaş,Štěpánka Pustková,C. Randin,Valerijus Rašomavičius,Kamila Reczyńska,Tamás Rédei,Klára Řehounková,Nina Richner,Anita C. Risch,Christian Rixen,Sergey Rosbakh,Christiane Roscher,Gert Rosenthal,G. Rossi,H. Rötzer,Camille Roux,Sabine B. Rumpf,Eszter Ruprecht,Solvita Rūsiņa,Irati Sanz‐Zubizarreta,Meret Schindler,Wolfgang Schmidt,Dirk Schories,Joachim Schrautzer,Hendrik Schubert,Martin Schuetz,Angelika Schwabe,Helena Schwaiger,Peter Schwartze,Jan Šebesta,H. Seiler,Urban Šilc,Vasco Da Silva,Petr Šmilauer,Marie Šmilauerová,T. Sperle,Alina Stachurska‐Swakoń,Nils Stanik,Angela Stanisci,Kristina Steffen,Christian Storm,Hans Georg Stroh,N. Sugorkina,Krzysztof Świerkosz,Sebastian Świerszcz,Magdalena Szymura,Balázs Teleki,G. Thébaud,Jean-Paul Theurillat,Lubomír Tichý,Urs A. Treier,Pavel Dan Turtureanu,Karol Ujházy,Mariana Ujházyová,Tudor-Mihai Ursu,A. K. Uziębło,Orsolya Valkó,Hans Van Calster,K. Van Meerbeek,B. Vandevoorde,Vigdis Vandvik,Marco Varricchione,Kiril Vassilev,Luis Villar,Risto Virtanen,Pascal Vittoz,Winfried Voigt,Andreas von Heßberg,Goddert von Oheimb,E.R. Wagner,G. Walther,Camilla Wellstein,Karsten Wesche,Markus Wilhelm,Wolfgang Willner,Sonja Wipf,Burghard Wittig,Thomas Wohlgemuth,Ben A. Woodcock,Monika Wulf,Franz Essl +264 more
TL;DR: ReSurveyEurope is a new database of resurveyed vegetation plots in Europe containing a vast amount of data from various habitats. It includes high-precision permanent plots and presence/absence and abundance information on plant species.
Two decades of forest understory vegetation development in a 445-year chronosequence in the Siskiyou mountains of southwestern Oregon, USA
Matthew J. Reilly,Maureen J. Jules,Erik S. Jules +2 more
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Ajdi Mouhcine,Kara Mohammed,Amine Assouguem,Younes Gaga,Safaa Benmassoud,Ahmed Bari,Essam A. Ali,Hafize Fidan,Rachid Lahlali,Abderrahim Bouhaddioui,Abdelmajid Khabbach,Jamila Bahhou +11 more
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