Land-use impacts on plant functional diversity throughout Europe

Author:

Rosa FrancescaORCID,van Bodegom Peter M.ORCID,Hellweg StefanieORCID,Pfister StephanORCID,Biurrun IdoiaORCID,Boch SteffenORCID,Chytrý MilanORCID,Ćušterevska RenataORCID,Dalle Fratte MicheleORCID,Damasceno GabriellaORCID,Garbolino EmmanuelORCID,Lenoir JonathanORCID,Ozinga Wim AORCID,Penuelas JosepORCID,Sabatini Francesco MariaORCID,Schrodt FranziskaORCID,Uogintas DomasORCID,Byun ChaehoORCID,Dolezal JiriORCID,Dziuba TetianaORCID,Hérault BrunoORCID,Martín-Forés IreneORCID,Niinemets ÜloORCID,Peyre GwendolynORCID,Scherer LauraORCID

Abstract

AbstractAimGlobal biodiversity loss resulting from anthropogenic land-use activities is a pressing concern, requiring precise assessments of impacts at large spatial extents. Existing models mainly focus on species richness and abundance, lacking insights into ecological mechanisms and species’ roles in ecosystem functioning. To bridge this gap, we conducted an extensive analysis of the impact of human land use on vascular plant functional diversity, across diverse land-use classes and bioregions in Europe, comparing it to traditional metrics.Location: EuropeTime period: 1992-2019Major taxa studied: Vascular plantsMethodsIntegrating extensive databases of vegetation plots with spatial data on land use and land cover, we paired plots from areas actively used and modified by humans with plots from natural habitats under similar environmental conditions. Using species occurrences and traits, in each plot we computed three complementary functional diversity metrics (functional richness, evenness, and divergence), species richness and abundance. We assessed the impact of land use by comparing the metrics in the paired plots.ResultsOur findings revealed that, compared to natural habitats, anthropogenic land use exhibits lower functional richness and divergence but higher functional evenness across most land-use classes and bioregions. The response of functional richness was more marked than the other two metrics and especially pronounced in croplands and urban areas and in northern bioregions. Functional richness exhibited a pattern that did not fully overlap with the trend in species richness, providing useful complementary information.Main conclusionsWe provide a large-scale precise assessment of anthropogenic land-use impacts on functional diversity across Europe. Our findings indicate that: (i) human disturbance significantly alters plant functional diversity compared to natural habitats; (ii) this alteration goes in the direction of functional homogenization; (i) functional diversity metrics complement traditional metrics by offering deeper insights into the ecological mechanisms in response to anthropogenic land use.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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