11 research outputs found

    Long-term land-cover/use change in a traditional farming landscape in Romania inferred from pollen data, historical maps and satellite images

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    Traditional farming landscapes in the temperate zone that have persisted for millennia can be exceptionally species-rich and are therefore key conservation targets. In contrast to Europe’s West, Eastern Europe harbours widespread traditional farming landscapes, but drastic socio-economic and political changes in the twentieth century are likely to have impacted these landscapes profoundly. We reconstructed long-term land-use/cover and biodiversity changes over the last 150 years in a traditional farming landscape of outstanding species diversity in Transylvania. We used the Regional Estimates of Vegetation Abundance from Large Sites model applied to a pollen record from the Transylvanian Plain and a suite of historical and satellite-based maps. We documented widespread changes in the extent and location of grassland and cropland, a loss of wood pastures as well as a gradual increase in forest extent. Land management in the socialist period (1947–1989) led to grassland expansion, but grassland diversity decreased due to intensive production. Land-use intensity has declined since the collapse of socialism in 1989, resulting in widespread cropland abandonment and conversion to grassland. However, these trends may be temporary due to both ongoing woody encroachment as well as grassland management intensification in productive areas. Remarkably, only 8% of all grasslands existed throughout the entire time period (1860–2010), highlighting the importance of land-use history when identifying target areas for conservation, given that old-growth grasslands are most valuable in terms of biodiversity. Combining datasets from different disciplines can yield important additional insights into dynamic landscape and biodiversity changes, informing conservation actions to maintain these species-rich landscapes in the longer term

    GrassPlot - a database of multi-scale plant diversity in Palaearctic grasslands

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    GrassPlot is a collaborative vegetation-plot database organised by the Eurasian Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) and listed in the Global Index of Vegetation-Plot Databases (GIVD ID EU-00-003). GrassPlot collects plot records (releves) from grasslands and other open habitats of the Palaearctic biogeographic realm. It focuses on precisely delimited plots of eight standard grain sizes (0.0001; 0.001;... 1,000 m(2)) and on nested-plot series with at least four different grain sizes. The usage of GrassPlot is regulated through Bylaws that intend to balance the interests of data contributors and data users. The current version (v. 1.00) contains data for approximately 170,000 plots of different sizes and 2,800 nested-plot series. The key components are richness data and metadata. However, most included datasets also encompass compositional data. About 14,000 plots have near-complete records of terricolous bryophytes and lichens in addition to vascular plants. At present, GrassPlot contains data from 36 countries throughout the Palaearctic, spread across elevational gradients and major grassland types. GrassPlot with its multi-scale and multi-taxon focus complements the larger international vegetationplot databases, such as the European Vegetation Archive (EVA) and the global database " sPlot". Its main aim is to facilitate studies on the scale-and taxon-dependency of biodiversity patterns and drivers along macroecological gradients. GrassPlot is a dynamic database and will expand through new data collection coordinated by the elected Governing Board. We invite researchers with suitable data to join GrassPlot. Researchers with project ideas addressable with GrassPlot data are welcome to submit proposals to the Governing Board

    Festuco-Brometea-Gesellschaften im SiebenbĂŒrgischen Becken (RumĂ€nien) : eine vorlĂ€ufige Übersicht zu Syntaxonomie, Ökologie und BiodiversitĂ€t

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    The Transylvanian Plateau in Romania is well known to host large areas of a variety of dry grassland types, still traditionally managed by low-intensity mowing or grazing. While this natural heritage is now under threat from changes in agricultural practices, the diversity of Transylvanian dry grasslands is still little understood. There is a lack of both field data sampled with standardised methods and a syntaxonomic treatment with modern statistical methods and supra-regional perspective. Therefore, the European Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) carried out its first international Research Expedition in Transylvania 2009 to study syntaxonomy, vegetation-environment relationships, and biodiversity patterns of these communities. In various locations across Transylvania, we sampled 10-mÂČ vegetation plots (n = 82) and nested-plot series from 0.0001 mÂČ to 100 mÂČ (n = 20), including all vascular plant, bryophyte, and lichen species, as well as structural and soil data. The vegetation classification was carried out with modified TWINSPAN, followed by determination of diagnostic species with phi values and a small-scale re-assignment of relevĂ©s with the aim of crispness maximisation. Both TWINSPAN and ordination revealed three major groups of syntaxa, which were matched to three orders from the class of basiphilous dry grasslands, Festuco-Brometea, represented by one alliance each: rocky dry grasslands (Stipo pulcherrimae-Festucetalia pallentis: Seslerion rigidae); xeric grasslands on deep soils (Festucetalia valesiacae: Stipion lessingianae) and meso-xeric grasslands on deep soils (Brachypodietalia pinnati: Cirsio-Brachypodion pinnati). We accepted nine association-level units plus two that potentially merit association status but were only represented by one relevĂ© each. Most of the units could be identified with one or several previously described associations. To support nomenclatural stability, we provide a nomenclatural revision and designate nomenclatural types where previously there were none. Further, we used DCA ordination and analysis of variance to determine the main environmental drivers of floristic differentiation and to determine ecological and structural differences between the vegetation types. The strongest differentiation occurred along the aridity gradient with the dense, particularly diverse stands on more or less level sites on the one hand (Brachypodietalia pinnati) and the more open, less diverse stands on steep south-facing slopes on the other end of the gradient (Stipo pulcherrimae- Festucetalia pallentis, Festucetalia valesiacae). The two xeric orders were then separated along the second DCA axis, with the Stipo pulcherrimae-Festucetalia pallentis inhabiting the stone-rich sites at higher altitudes while the Festucetalia valesiacae occur on soft, deep substrata at lower altitudes. The analysed dry grassland communities have extraordinarily high -diversity at all spatial scales for all plants and for vascular plants, but are relatively poor in bryophytes and lichens. Some formerly mown stands of the Festuco sulcatae-Brachypodietum pinnati (Brachypodietalia pinnati) are even richer in vascular plant species than any other recorded vegetation type worldwide on the spatial scales of 0.1 mÂČ (43) and 10 mÂČ (98); the respective relevĂ©s are documented here for the first time. Also, the b-diversity of the grasslands was unexpectedly high, with a mean z-value of 0.275. Despite its limited extent, the methodological thoroughness of this study allows us to shed new light on the syntaxonomy of dry grasslands in Romania and to raise the awareness that Transylvania still hosts High Nature Value grasslands that are bio - diversity hotspots at a global scale but at the same time are highly endangered through changes in agricultural practices.Das SiebenbĂŒrgische Becken ist bekannt als Heimat verschiedener Typen von Trockenrasen, die eine große FlĂ€che einnehmen. Diese GraslĂ€nder werden zum großen Teil noch sehr traditionell durch exten sive Beweidung oder Mahd genutzt. WĂ€hrend dieses Naturerbe derzeit durch gravierende Land nutzungs Ă€nderungen gefĂ€hrdet ist, ist wenig ĂŒber die Vielfalt der SiebenbĂŒrgischen Trockenrasen bekannt. Es fehlten standardisiert erhobene Daten sowie syntaxonomische Auswertungen mit modernen statistischen Methoden aus einem ĂŒberregionalen Blickwinkel. All diese Tatsachen zusammen motivierten die European Dry Grassland Group (EDGG) dazu, ihre erste internationale Forschungsexpedition im Jahre 2009 nach SiebenbĂŒrgen durchzufĂŒhren, um die Syntaxonomie, Ökologie und BiodiversitĂ€tsmuster der SiebenbĂŒrgischen Trockenrasengesellschaften zu untersuchen. In verschiedenen Gebieten SiebenbĂŒrgens fertigten wir sowohl Vegetationsaufnahmen auf 10 mÂČ-FlĂ€chen (n = 82) als auch geschachtelte Aufnahmeserien auf FlĂ€chen von von 0,0001 mÂČ bis 100 mÂČ GrĂ¶ĂŸe (n = 20) an. In den AufnahmenflĂ€chen wurden GefĂ€ĂŸpflanzen, Moose und Flechten erhoben sowie Untersuchungen der Vegetationsstruktur und Bodeneigenschaften durchgefĂŒhrt. Die Vegetationsklassifikation erfolgte mit Hilfe einer modifizierten TWINSPAN-Analyse. Diagnostische Arten wurden durch Phi-Werte nach einer Neuzuordnung weniger Aufnahmen mit dem Ziel der Maximierung der TrennschĂ€rfe ermittelt. Sowohl durch TWINSPAN als auch durch die Ordninationanalyse wurden drei Hauptgruppen von Syntaxa ermittelt, die je einer Einheit innerhalb von drei Vegetationsordnungen der Klasse der basiphilen Trockenrasen (Festuco-Brometea) zugeordnet wurden: Felstrockenrasen (Stipo pulcherrimae-Festucetalia pallentis: Seslerion rigidae); Trockenrasen auf tiefgrĂŒndigem Boden (Festucetalia valesiacae: Stipion lessingianae) und Halbtrockenrasen auf tiefgrĂŒndigen Böden (Brachypodietalia pinnati: Cirsio-Brachypodion pinnati). Wir akzeptierten neun Vegetationseinheiten auf der Ebene von Assoziationen sowie zwei weitere mögliche Assoziationen, die aber nur durch jeweils eine Vegetationsaufnahme reprĂ€sentiert waren. Die meisten Einheiten konnten einer oder mehreren bereits beschriebenen Assoziationen zugeordnet werden. Um nomenklatorische StabilitĂ€t zu erreichen, fĂŒhrten wir eine nomenklatorische Revision der Gesellschaften durch und benannten neue nomenklatorische Einheiten. Weiterhin fĂŒhrten wir eine Gradientenanalyse (DCA) und Varianzanalysen durch, um den Zusammenhang zwischen Umweltfaktoren und Vegetationsunterschieden zu ermitteln sowie ökologische und strukturelle Unterschiede zwischen den Vegetationstypen zu analysieren Die stĂ€rksten floristischen Unterschiede wurden entlang eines Trockheitsgradienten mit dichter, besonders artenreicher Vegetation auf weniger stark geneigten FlĂ€chen auf der einen (Brachypodietalia pinnati) und offener, weniger artenreicher Vegetation an steilen SĂŒdhĂ€ngen auf der anderen Seite des Gradienten (Stipo pulcherrimae-Festucetalia pallentis, Festucetalia valesiacae) ermittelt. Diese zwei Ordnungen differenzierten entlang der zweiten DCA-Achse, wobei die Stipo pulcherrimae-Festucetalia pallentis-Gesellschaften auf gesteinsreichen FlĂ€chen in höheren Lagen und die Festucetalia valesiacae- Gesellschaften auf tiefgrĂŒndigen Böden in niedrigeren Lagen vorkommen. Die untersuchten Trockenrasengesellschaften besaßen ĂŒber alle rĂ€umlichen Skalen hinweg eine außergewöhnlich hohe b-DiversitĂ€t, bezogen auf die Gesamtartenzahl und die GefĂ€ĂŸpflanzen, aber sie waren arm an Moosen und Flechten. FĂŒr einige der frĂŒher gemĂ€hten FlĂ€chen der Festuco sulcatae-Brachypodietum pinnati-Gesellschaft (Brachypodietalia pinnati) wurde sogar die höchste GefĂ€ĂŸpflanzenvielfalt weltweit auf den Skalen 0,1 mÂČ (43 Arten) und 10 mÂČ (98 Arten) gemessen; die jeweiligen Vegetationsaufnahmen werden hier zum ersten Mal prĂ€sentiert. Auch die b-DiversitĂ€t des Graslandes war unerwartet hoch mit einem mittleren z-Wert von 0.275. Zusammenfassend lĂ€sst sich sagen, dass unsere Studie durch die methodische GrĂŒndlichkeit trotz ihres begrenzten Ausmaßes ein neues Licht auf die Syntaxonomie der rumĂ€nischen Trockenrasen wirft. Weiterhin stĂ€rkt sie das Bewusstsein, dass SiebenbĂŒrgen immer noch Grasland von sehr hohem Schutzwert besitzt, das global betrachtet einen Hotspot der BiodiversitĂ€t bildet, aber durch LandnutzungsĂ€nderungen stark gefĂ€hrdet ist

    sPlotOpen - An environmentally balanced, open-access, global dataset of vegetation plots

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    Motivation Assessing biodiversity status and trends in plant communities is critical for understanding, quantifying and predicting the effects of global change on ecosystems. Vegetation plots record the occurrence or abundance of all plant species co-occurring within delimited local areas. This allows species absences to be inferred, information seldom provided by existing global plant datasets. Although many vegetation plots have been recorded, most are not available to the global research community. A recent initiative, called 'sPlot', compiled the first global vegetation plot database, and continues to grow and curate it. The sPlot database, however, is extremely unbalanced spatially and environmentally, and is not open-access. Here, we address both these issues by (a) resampling the vegetation plots using several environmental variables as sampling strata and (b) securing permission from data holders of 105 local-to-regional datasets to openly release data. We thus present sPlotOpen, the largest open-access dataset of vegetation plots ever released. sPlotOpen can be used to explore global diversity at the plant community level, as ground truth data in remote sensing applications, or as a baseline for biodiversity monitoring. Main types of variable contained Vegetation plots (n = 95,104) recording cover or abundance of naturally co-occurring vascular plant species within delimited areas. sPlotOpen contains three partially overlapping resampled datasets (c. 50,000 plots each), to be used as replicates in global analyses. Besides geographical location, date, plot size, biome, elevation, slope, aspect, vegetation type, naturalness, coverage of various vegetation layers, and source dataset, plot-level data also include community-weighted means and variances of 18 plant functional traits from the TRY Plant Trait Database. Spatial location and grain Global, 0.01-40,000 m(2). Time period and grain 1888-2015, recording dates. Major taxa and level of measurement 42,677 vascular plant taxa, plot-level records. Software format Three main matrices (.csv), relationally linked

    sPlot:a new tool for global vegetation analyses

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    Abstract Aims: Vegetation‐plot records provide information on the presence and cover or abundance of plants co‐occurring in the same community. Vegetation‐plot data are spread across research groups, environmental agencies and biodiversity research centers and, thus, are rarely accessible at continental or global scales. Here we present the sPlot database, which collates vegetation plots worldwide to allow for the exploration of global patterns in taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity at the plant community level. Results: sPlot version 2.1 contains records from 1,121,244 vegetation plots, which comprise 23,586,216 records of plant species and their relative cover or abundance in plots collected worldwide between 1885 and 2015. We complemented the information for each plot by retrieving climate and soil conditions and the biogeographic context (e.g., biomes) from external sources, and by calculating community‐weighted means and variances of traits using gap‐filled data from the global plant trait database TRY. Moreover, we created a phylogenetic tree for 50,167 out of the 54,519 species identified in the plots. We present the first maps of global patterns of community richness and community‐weighted means of key traits. Conclusions: The availability of vegetation plot data in sPlot offers new avenues for vegetation analysis at the global scale

    sPlotOpen:an environmentally balanced, open-access, global dataset of vegetation plots

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    Abstract Motivation: Assessing biodiversity status and trends in plant communities is critical for understanding, quantifying and predicting the effects of global change on ecosystems. Vegetation plots record the occurrence or abundance of all plant species co-occurring within delimited local areas. This allows species absences to be inferred, information seldom provided by existing global plant datasets. Although many vegetation plots have been recorded, most are not available to the global research community. A recent initiative, called ‘sPlot’, compiled the first global vegetation plot database, and continues to grow and curate it. The sPlot database, however, is extremely unbalanced spatially and environmentally, and is not open-access. Here, we address both these issues by (a) resampling the vegetation plots using several environmental variables as sampling strata and (b) securing permission from data holders of 105 local-to-regional datasets to openly release data. We thus present sPlotOpen, the largest open-access dataset of vegetation plots ever released. sPlotOpen can be used to explore global diversity at the plant community level, as ground truth data in remote sensing applications, or as a baseline for biodiversity monitoring. Main types of variable contained: Vegetation plots (n = 95,104) recording cover or abundance of naturally co-occurring vascular plant species within delimited areas. sPlotOpen contains three partially overlapping resampled datasets (c. 50,000 plots each), to be used as replicates in global analyses. Besides geographical location, date, plot size, biome, elevation, slope, aspect, vegetation type, naturalness, coverage of various vegetation layers, and source dataset, plot-level data also include community-weighted means and variances of 18 plant functional traits from the TRY Plant Trait Database. Spatial location and grain: Global, 0.01–40,000 mÂČ. Time period and grain: 1888–2015, recording dates. Major taxa and level of measurement: 42,677 vascular plant taxa, plot-level records. Software format: Three main matrices (.csv), relationally linked

    Benchmarking plant diversity of Palaearctic grasslands and other open habitats

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    Abstract Aims: Understanding fine-grain diversity patterns across large spatial extents is fundamental for macroecological research and biodiversity conservation. Using the GrassPlot database, we provide benchmarks of fine-grain richness values of Palaearctic open habitats for vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens and complete vegetation (i.e., the sum of the former three groups). Location: Palaearctic biogeographic realm. Methods: We used 126,524 plots of eight standard grain sizes from the GrassPlot database: 0.0001, 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100 and 1,000 mÂČ and calculated the mean richness and standard deviations, as well as maximum, minimum, median, and first and third quartiles for each combination of grain size, taxonomic group, biome, region, vegetation type and phytosociological class. Results: Patterns of plant diversity in vegetation types and biomes differ across grain sizes and taxonomic groups. Overall, secondary (mostly semi-natural) grasslands and natural grasslands are the richest vegetation type. The open-access file ”GrassPlot Diversity Benchmarks” and the web tool “GrassPlot Diversity Explorer” are now available online (https://edgg.org/databases/GrasslandDiversityExplorer) and provide more insights into species richness patterns in the Palaearctic open habitats. Conclusions: The GrassPlot Diversity Benchmarks provide high-quality data on species richness in open habitat types across the Palaearctic. These benchmark data can be used in vegetation ecology, macroecology, biodiversity conservation and data quality checking. While the amount of data in the underlying GrassPlot database and their spatial coverage are smaller than in other extensive vegetation-plot databases, species recordings in GrassPlot are on average more complete, making it a valuable complementary data source in macroecology

    Benchmarking plant diversity of Palaearctic grasslands and other open habitats

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    Aims: Understanding fine-grain diversity patterns across large spatial extents is fundamental for macroecological research and biodiversity conservation. Using the GrassPlot database, we provide benchmarks of fine-grain richness values of Palaearctic open habitats for vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens and complete vegetation (i.e., the sum of the former three groups). Location: Palaearctic biogeographic realm. Methods: We used 126,524 plots of eight standard grain sizes from the GrassPlot database: 0.0001, 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10, 100 and 1,000 m(2) and calculated the mean richness and standard deviations, as well as maximum, minimum, median, and first and third quartiles for each combination of grain size, taxonomic group, biome, region, vegetation type and phytosociological class. Results: Patterns of plant diversity in vegetation types and biomes differ across grain sizes and taxonomic groups. Overall, secondary (mostly semi-natural) grasslands and natural grasslands are the richest vegetation type. The open-access file "GrassPlot Diversity Benchmarks" and the web tool "GrassPlot Diversity Explorer" are now available online () and provide more insights into species richness patterns in the Palaearctic open habitats. Conclusions: The GrassPlot Diversity Benchmarks provide high-quality data on species richness in open habitat types across the Palaearctic. These benchmark data can be used in vegetation ecology, macroecology, biodiversity conservation and data quality checking. While the amount of data in the underlying GrassPlot database and their spatial coverage are smaller than in other extensive vegetation-plot databases, species recordings in GrassPlot are on average more complete, making it a valuable complementary data source in macroecology
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