Does forest fragmentation affect the same way all growth-forms?
Fecha
2011-09-15Metadatos
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Journal of Environmental Management 94 : 125-131 (2012)
Resumen
Fragmentation of natural habitats is one of the main causes of the loss of biodiversity. However, all plants
do not respond to habitat fragmentation in the same way due to differences in species traits. We studied
the effect of patch size and isolation on the biodiversity of vegetation in the mixed-oak forests in the
north of the Iberian Peninsula. The aim was to evaluate whether all the growth-forms of vegetation are
equally affected by forest fragmentation in order to improve the management strategies to restore this
type of vegetation.
This study has shown that the effect of the area and spatial isolation of the patches was not the same
for the different growth-forms. Fragmentation had a mainly negative effect on the richness and diversity
of forest specialist species, especially ferns and herbaceous growth-forms. Moreover, the presence and/or
cover of woodland herbaceous species (such as Lamiastrum galeobdolon and Helleborus viridis) and of
woodland ferns (namely Asplenium adiantum-nigrum, Asplenium trichomanes, Polystichum setiferum,
Dryopteris affinis) were negatively affected by patch size, possibly due to the reduction of habitat quality.
These species have been replaced by more generalist species (such as Cardamine pratensis, Cirsium sp.,
Pulmonaria longifolia or Rumex acetosella) in small patches. Patch isolation had a negative effect on the
presence of forest specialist species (namely, L. galeobdolon, Frangula alnus, Hypericum androsaemum,
A. adiantum-nigrum and Athyrium filix-femina) and favored colonization by more generalist species such
as Cirsium sp., Calluna vulgaris, Erica arborea or Ulex sp. Thus, in this region special attention should be
paid to the conservation of forest specialist species, especially ferns and herbs. In conservation policy
focused on forest specialist species, the most valuable species in forest ecosystems, conservation of large
forest areas should be promoted.