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Testing macroecological abundance patterns : the relationship between local abundance and range size, range position and climatic suitability among European vascular plants

Authors :
Sporbert, Maria
Keil, Petr
Seidler, Gunnar
Bruelheide, Helge
Jandt, Ute
Aćić, Svetlana
Biurrun, Idoia
Campos, Juan Antonio
Čarni, Andraž
Chytrý, Milan
Ćušterevska, Renata
Dengler, Jürgen
Golub, Valentin
Jansen, Florian
Kuzemko, Anna
Lenoir, Jonathan
Marcenò, Corrado
Moeslund, Jesper Erenskjold
Pérez‐Haase, Aaron
Rūsiņa, Solvita
Šilc, Urban
Tsiripidris, Ioannis
Vandvik, Vigdis
Vasilev, Kiril
Virtanen, Risto
Welk, Erik
Sporbert, Maria
Keil, Petr
Seidler, Gunnar
Bruelheide, Helge
Jandt, Ute
Aćić, Svetlana
Biurrun, Idoia
Campos, Juan Antonio
Čarni, Andraž
Chytrý, Milan
Ćušterevska, Renata
Dengler, Jürgen
Golub, Valentin
Jansen, Florian
Kuzemko, Anna
Lenoir, Jonathan
Marcenò, Corrado
Moeslund, Jesper Erenskjold
Pérez‐Haase, Aaron
Rūsiņa, Solvita
Šilc, Urban
Tsiripidris, Ioannis
Vandvik, Vigdis
Vasilev, Kiril
Virtanen, Risto
Welk, Erik
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Aim: A fundamental question in macroecology centres around understanding the relationship between species’ local abundance and their distribution in geographical and climatic space (i.e. the multi-dimensional climatic space or climatic niche). Here, we tested three macroecological hypotheses that link local abundance to the following range properties: (a) the abundance–range size relationship, (b) the abundance–range centre relationship and (c) the abundance–suitability relationship. Location: Europe. Taxon: Vascular plants. Methods: Distribution range maps were extracted from the Chorological Database Halle to derive information on the range and niche sizes of 517 European vascular plant species. To estimate local abundance, we assessed samples from 744,513 vegetation plots in the European Vegetation Archive, where local species’ abundance is available as plant cover per plot. We then calculated the ‘centrality’, that is, the distance between the location of the abundance observation and each species’ range centre in geographical and climatic space. The climatic suitability of plot locations was estimated using coarse-grain species distribution models (SDMs). The relationships between centrality or climatic suitability with abundance was tested using linear models and quantile regression. We summarized the overall trend across species’ regression slopes from linear models and quantile regression using a meta-analytical approach. Results: We did not detect any positive relationships between a species’ mean local abundance and the size of its geographical range or climatic niche. Contrasting yet significant correlations were detected between abundance and centrality or climatic suitability among species. Main conclusions: Our results do not provide unequivocal support for any of the relationships tested, demonstrating that determining properties of species’ distributions at large grains and extents might be of limited use for predicting local abundance, including cur

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of Biogeography, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1200742617
Document Type :
Electronic Resource