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Green infrastructure can promote plant functional connectivity in a grassland species around fragmented semi-natural grasslands in NW-Europe
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- WILEY, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Species may benefit from green infrastructure, i.e. the network of natural and anthropogenic habitat remnants in human-dominated landscapes, if it helps isolated populations in remaining habitat patches to be functionally connected. The importance of green infrastructure is therefore increasingly emphasized in conservation policy to counter biodiversity loss. However, there is limited evidence, particularly in plants, that green infrastructure promotes functional connectivity, i.e. supports the colonization of habitat patches across a landscape. We applied landscape genetics to test whether the green infrastructure supports structural and functional connectivity in the grassland perennial Galium verum, in 35 landscapes in Belgium, Germany and Sweden. We used multivariate genetic clustering techniques, nestedness analyses and conditional inference trees to examine landscape-scale patterns in genetic diversity and structure of plant populations in the green infrastructure surrounding semi-natural grasslands. Inferred functional connectivity explained genetic variation better than structural connectivity, yielding positive effects on genetic variation. The road verge network, a major structural component of the green infrastructure and its functional connectivity, most effectively explained genetic diversity and composition in G. verum. Galium verum ramets occupying the surrounding landscape proved to be genetic subsets of focal grassland populations, shaping a nested landscape population genetic structure with focal grasslands, particularly ancient ones, harbouring unique genetic diversity. This nested pattern weakened as road network density increased, suggesting road verge networks enable high landscape occupancy by increased habitat availability and facilitates gene flow into the surrounding landscape. Our study proposes that green infrastructure can promote functional connectivity, providing that a plant species can survive outside of core habitat patches. As this often excludes habitat specialist species, conservation practice and policy should primarily focus on ancient, managed semi-natural grasslands. These grasslands both harbour unique genetic diversity and act as primary gene and propagule sources for the surrounding landscape, highlighting their conservation value.<br />This research was funded through the 2015–2016 BiodivERsA COFUND call for research proposals, with the national funders FORMAS, the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency (Naturvårdsverket), the Belgian Science Policy Office (BelSPo), the Germany Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung, FKZ: 01LC1619A) and the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades). JMB was funded under UKCEH National Capability project no. 06895.
- Subjects :
- Landscape ecology
Biodiversity & Conservation
DIVERSITY
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GENETIC CONSEQUENCES
semi-natural grassland
Biodiversity conservation
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE
Genetic diversity
Ecology and Environment
Functional connectivity
RICHNESS
Seminatural grassland
HISTORY
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Science & Technology
landscape ecology
Ecology
functional connectivity
Green infrastructure
genetic diversity
CORRIDORS
SEED DISPERSAL
green infrastructure
HABITAT FRAGMENTATION
PATTERNS
Biodiversity Conservation
LANDSCAPE GENETICS
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dbf752f8103a07418705ff84d5a3fbf7