Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, 2100, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Centre for Biological Diversity and Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, KY16 9TH, UK.
Ecol Lett. 2019 Oct;22(10):1650-1657. doi: 10.1111/ele.13361. Epub 2019 Jul 31.
While biodiversity loss continues globally, assessments of regional and local change over time have been equivocal. Here, we assess changes in plant species richness and beta diversity over 140 years at the level of regions within a country. Using 19th-century flora censuses for 14 Danish regions as a baseline, we overcome previous criticisms concerning short time series and neglect of completely altered habitats. We find that species composition has changed dramatically and directionally across all regions. Substantial species losses were more than offset by large gains, resulting in a net increase in species richness in all regions. The occupancy of initially widespread species increased, while initially rare species lost terrain. These changes were accompanied by strong biotic homogenization; i.e. regions are more similar now than they were 140 years ago. Species declining in Denmark were found to be in similar decline all over Northern Europe.
虽然全球范围内的生物多样性不断减少,但对区域和局部随时间变化的评估一直存在争议。在这里,我们评估了在一个国家内部的区域层面上,140 年来植物物种丰富度和β多样性的变化。我们利用 19 世纪丹麦 14 个地区的植物区系普查数据作为基线,克服了以前关于时间序列短和完全改变的栖息地被忽视的批评。我们发现,所有地区的物种组成都发生了显著而定向的变化。大量物种的丧失被大量的增加所抵消,导致所有地区的物种丰富度净增加。最初广泛分布的物种的占有量增加,而最初稀有的物种则失去了领地。这些变化伴随着强烈的生物同质化,即现在的地区比 140 年前更加相似。在丹麦减少的物种在北欧各地也发现了类似的减少。