journal article Jan 16, 2018

Climate warming and land‐use changes drive broad‐scale floristic changes in Southern Sweden

Global Change Biology Vol. 24 No. 6 pp. 2607-2621 · Wiley
View at Publisher Save 10.1111/gcb.14031
Abstract
AbstractLand‐use changes, pollution and climate warming during the 20th century have caused changes in biodiversity across the world. However, in many cases, the environmental drivers are poorly understood. To identify and rank the drivers currently causing broad‐scale floristic changes in N Europe, we analysed data from two vascular plant surveys of 200 randomly selected 2.5 × 2.5 km grid‐squares in Scania, southernmost Sweden, conducted 1989–2006 and 2008–2015, respectively, and related the change in frequency (performance) of the species to a wide range of species‐specific plant traits. We chose traits representing all plausible drivers of recent floristic changes: climatic change (northern distribution limit, flowering time), land‐use change (light requirement, response to grazing/mowing, response to soil disturbance), drainage (water requirement), acidification (pH optimum), nitrogen deposition and eutrophication (N requirement, N fixation ability, carnivory, parasitism, mycorrhizal associations), pollinator decline (mode of reproduction) and changes in CO2 levels (photosynthetic pathway). Our results suggest that climate warming and changes in land‐use were the main drivers of changes in the flora during the last decades. Climate warming appeared as the most influential driver, with northern distribution limit explaining 30%–60% of the variance in the GLMM models. However, the relative importance of the drivers differed among habitat types, with grassland species being affected the most by cessation of grazing/mowing and species of ruderal habitats by on‐going concentration of both agriculture and human population to the most productive soils. For wetland species, only pH optimum was significantly related to species performance, possibly an effect of the increasing humification of acidic water bodies. An observed relative decline of mycorrhizal species may possibly be explained by decreasing nitrogen deposition resulting in less competition for phosphorus. We found no effect of shortage or decline of pollinating lepidopterans and bees.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
82
[1]
Andersson P.‐A. "Floristic patterns and phytogeography of Skåne, S Sweden" Symbolae Botanicae Upsalienses (1996)
[4]
Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4

Douglas Bates, Martin Mächler, Ben Bolker et al.

Journal of Statistical Software 10.18637/jss.v067.i01
[9]
Changes in plant community composition lag behind climate warming in lowland forests

Romain Bertrand, Jonathan Lenoir, Christian Piedallu et al.

Nature 10.1038/nature10548
[11]
Global assessment of nitrogen deposition effects on terrestrial plant diversity: a synthesis

R. Bobbink, K. Hicks, J. Galloway et al.

Ecological Applications 10.1890/08-1140.1
[25]
Fox J. (2011)
[30]
Bee declines driven by combined stress from parasites, pesticides, and lack of flowers

Dave Goulson, Elizabeth Nicholls, Cristina Botías et al.

Science 10.1126/science.1255957
[37]
Johansson H. (2007)
[39]
Jonsell B. (2004)
[41]
Klotz S. "BIOLFLOR – Eine Datenbank zu biologisch‐ökologischen Merkmalen der Gefäßpflanzen in Deutschland" Schriftenreihe für Vegetationskunde (2002)
[46]
Maad J. "Floristic changes during the 20th century in Uppland, east central Sweden" Svensk Botanisk Tidskrift (2009)
[50]
Mossberg B. (2003)

Showing 50 of 82 references

Metrics
34
Citations
82
References
Details
Published
Jan 16, 2018
Vol/Issue
24(6)
Pages
2607-2621
License
View
Funding
Lund Botanical Society
Cite This Article
Torbjörn Tyler, Lina Herbertsson, Pål Axel Olsson, et al. (2018). Climate warming and land‐use changes drive broad‐scale floristic changes in Southern Sweden. Global Change Biology, 24(6), 2607-2621. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14031