Disentangling the influence of environmental and anthropogenic factors on the distribution of endemic vascular plants in Sardinia
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Plos One
Fecha
2017-08-02Referencia bibliográfica
Fois M, Fenu G, Cañadas EM, Bacchetta G (2017) Disentangling the influence of environmental and anthropogenic factors on the distribution of endemic vascular plants in Sardinia. PLoS ONE 12(8): e0182539. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182539
Resumen
Due to the impelling urgency of plant conservation and the increasing availability of high resolution
spatially interpolated (e.g. climate variables) and categorical data (e.g. land cover
and vegetation type), many recent studies have examined relationships among plant species
distributions and a diversified set of explanatory factors; nevertheless, global and
regional patterns of endemic plant richness remain in many cases unexplained. One such
pattern is the 294 endemic vascular plant taxa recorded on a 1 km resolution grid on the
environmentally heterogeneous island of Sardinia. Sixteen predictors, including topographic,
geological, climatic and anthropogenic factors, were used to model local (number of
taxa inside each 1 km grid cell) Endemic Vascular Plant Richness (EVPR). Generalized Linear
Models were used to evaluate how each factor affected the distribution of local EVPR.
Significant relationships with local EVPR and topographic, geological, climatic and anthropogenic
factors were found. In particular, elevation explained the larger fraction of variation in
endemic richness but other environmental factors (e.g. precipitation seasonality and slope)
and human-related factors (e.g. the Human Influence Index (HII) and the proportion of
anthropogenic land uses) were, respectively, positively and negatively correlated with local
EVPR. Regional EVPR (number of endemic taxa inside each 100 m elevation interval) was
also measured to compare local and regional EVPR patterns along the elevation gradient. In
contrast to local, regional EVPR tended to decrease with altitude partly due to the decreasing
area covered along altitude. The contrasting results between local and regional patterns
suggest that local richness increases as a result of increased interspecific aggregation along
altitude, whereas regional richness may depend on the interaction between area and altitude.
This suggests that the shape and magnitude of the species-area relationship might
vary with elevation. This work provides-for the first time in Sardinia-a comprehensive
analysis of the influence of environmental factors on the pattern of EVPR in the entire territory,
from sea level to the highest peaks. Elevation, as well as other environmental and
human-related variables, were confirmed to be influencing factors. In addition, variations of
EVPR patterns at regional-to-local spatial scales inspire next investigations on the possible
interaction between elevation and area in explaining patterns of plant species richness.