Tsuzuki Yoichi, Koyanagi Tomoyo F, Miyashita Tadashi
School of Agriculture and Life Sciences The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan.
Present address: Graduate School of Environmental Science Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jan 10;10(3):1311-1323. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5985. eCollection 2020 Feb.
In suburban regions, vacant lots potentially offer significant opportunities for biodiversity conservation. Recently, in Japan, due to an economic recession, some previously developed lands have become vacant. Little is known, however, about the legacy of earlier earthmoving, which involves topsoil removal and ground leveling before residential construction, on plant community composition in such vacant lots. To understand (dis)assembly processes in vacant lots, we studied 24 grasslands in a suburban region in Japan: 12 grasslands that had experienced earthmoving and 12 that had not. We surveyed plant community composition and species richness, and clarified compositional turnover (replacement of species) and nestedness (nonrandom species loss) by distance-based β-diversities, which were summarized by PCoA analysis. We used piecewise structural equation modeling to examine the effects of soil properties, mowing frequency, past and present habitat connectivities on compositional changes. As a result, past earthmoving, mowing frequency, soil properties, and past habitat connectivity were found to be the drivers of compositional turnover. In particular, we found legacy effects of earthmoving: earthmoving promoted turnover from native grassland species to weeds in arable lands or roadside by altering soil properties. Mowing frequency also promoted the same turnover, implying that extensive rather than intensive mowing can modify the negative legacy effects and maintain grassland species. Decrease in present habitat connectivity marginally enhanced nonrandom loss of native grassland species (nestedness). Present habitat connectivity had a positive effect on species richness, highlighting the important roles of contemporary dispersal. Our study demonstrates that community assembly is a result of multiple processes differing in spatial and temporal scales. We suggest that extensive mowing at local scale, as well as giving a high conservation priority to grasslands with high habitat connectivity at regional scale, is the promising actions to maintain endangered native grassland species in suburban landscapes with negative legacy effects of earthmoving.
在郊区,空地可能为生物多样性保护提供重要机遇。最近在日本,由于经济衰退,一些先前已开发的土地变成了空地。然而,对于早期土方工程的遗留影响,即在住宅建设前进行的表土移除和平整土地作业对这些空地上植物群落组成的影响,我们却知之甚少。为了解空地上的(解)组装过程,我们研究了日本一个郊区的24片草地:12片经历过土方工程的草地和12片未经历过土方工程的草地。我们调查了植物群落组成和物种丰富度,并通过基于距离的β多样性(通过主坐标分析进行总结)阐明了组成周转率(物种替代)和嵌套性(非随机物种丧失)。我们使用分段结构方程模型来检验土壤性质、割草频率、过去和现在的栖息地连通性对组成变化的影响。结果发现,过去的土方工程、割草频率、土壤性质和过去的栖息地连通性是组成周转率的驱动因素。特别是,我们发现了土方工程的遗留影响:土方工程通过改变土壤性质,促进了从原生草地物种向耕地或路边杂草的转变。割草频率也促进了同样的转变,这意味着粗放式而非集约式割草可以改变负面的遗留影响并维持草地物种。当前栖息地连通性的降低略微加剧了原生草地物种的非随机丧失(嵌套性)。当前栖息地连通性对物种丰富度有积极影响,突出了当代扩散的重要作用。我们的研究表明,群落组装是多个在空间和时间尺度上不同的过程的结果。我们建议,在地方尺度上进行粗放式割草,以及在区域尺度上对具有高栖息地连通性的草地给予高度保护优先级,是在具有土方工程负面遗留影响的郊区景观中维持濒危原生草地物种的有前景的行动。