Far from naturalness: how much does spatial ecological structure of European tree assemblages depart from potential natural vegetation?

  • Articles in SCI Journals
  • Dec, 2016

Strona, G., Mauri, A., Veech, J.A., Seufert, G., San-Miguel, A.J. & Fattorini, S. (2016) Far from naturalness: how much does spatial ecological structure of European tree assemblages depart from potential natural vegetation?

PLOS One, 11(12), e0165178. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0165178 (IF2016 2,806; Q1 Multidisciplinary Sciences)
Summary:

Contemporaneous plant communities may retain a mark of past disturbances in their ecological patterns. However, unraveling the history of disturbance on natural systems at a large scale is often unfeasible, due to the complexity of the factors involved and lack of historical data. Here we aim at demonstrating how comparing observed spatial structure of tree assemblages with that expected in a hypothetical, undisturbed scenario can shed light on how natural European forests are. Borrowing an analytical approach developed in the field of network analysis, we assessed how much the observed ecological patterns of nestedness (i.e. positive co-occurrence), segregation (i.e. negative co-occurrence), and modularity in tree assemblages deviate from randomness, and from those projected by Potential Natural Vegetation (PNV) geobotanical expert assessments. We found clear evidence that European forests are far from a natural condition, showing only moderate signals (especially at higher latitudes) of the ecological spatial structure typical of undisturbed vegetation (i.e. nestedness). Our results highlight how taking into account spatial structure along with diversity can be a fundamental tool to address this problem and assess the degree of naturalness in species assemblages.


http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0165178

Team

  • Far from naturalness: how much does spatial ecological structure of European tree assemblages depart from potential natural vegetation? Simone Fattorini Island Biodiversity, Biogeography & Conservation - IBBC