-
Something wrong with this record ?
Diversity and biotic homogenization of urban land-snail faunas in relation to habitat types and macroclimate in 32 central European cities
M. Horsák, Z. Lososová, T. Čejka, L. Juřičková, M. Chytrý,
Language English Country United States
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
NLK
Directory of Open Access Journals
from 2006
Free Medical Journals
from 2006
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
from 2006
PubMed Central
from 2006
Europe PubMed Central
from 2006
ProQuest Central
from 2006-12-01
Open Access Digital Library
from 2006-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
from 2006-01-01
Open Access Digital Library
from 2006-10-01
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
from 2008-01-01
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2006-12-01
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2006-12-01
Public Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2006-12-01
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
from 2006
- MeSH
- Biodiversity * MeSH
- Snails classification MeSH
- Climate * MeSH
- Cities statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Conservation of Natural Resources MeSH
- Introduced Species statistics & numerical data MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Geographicals
- Europe MeSH
- Cities statistics & numerical data MeSH
The effects of non-native species invasions on community diversity and biotic homogenization have been described for various taxa in urban environments, but not for land snails. Here we relate the diversity of native and non-native land-snail urban faunas to urban habitat types and macroclimate, and analyse homogenization effects of non-native species across cities and within the main urban habitat types. Land-snail species were recorded in seven 1-ha plots in 32 cities of ten countries of Central Europe and Benelux (224 plots in total). Each plot represented one urban habitat type characterized by different management and a specific disturbance regime. For each plot, we obtained January, July and mean annual temperature and annual precipitation. Snail species were classified into either native or non-native. The effects of habitat type and macroclimate on the number of native and non-native species were analysed using generalized estimating equations; the homogenization effect of non-native species based on the Jaccard similarity index and homogenization index. We recorded 67 native and 20 non-native species. Besides being more numerous, native species also had much higher beta diversity than non-natives. There were significant differences between the studied habitat types in the numbers of native and non-native species, both of which decreased from less to heavily urbanized habitats. Macroclimate was more important for the number of non-native than native species; however in both cases the effect of climate on diversity was overridden by the effect of urban habitat type. This is the first study on urban land snails documenting that non-native land-snail species significantly contribute to homogenization among whole cities, but both the homogenization and diversification effects occur when individual habitat types are compared among cities. This indicates that the spread of non-native snail species may cause biotic homogenization, but it depends on scale and habitat type.
References provided by Crossref.org
- 000
- 00000naa a2200000 a 4500
- 001
- bmc14064050
- 003
- CZ-PrNML
- 005
- 20140707113516.0
- 007
- ta
- 008
- 140704s2013 xxu f 000 0|eng||
- 009
- AR
- 024 7_
- $a 10.1371/journal.pone.0071783 $2 doi
- 035 __
- $a (PubMed)23936525
- 040 __
- $a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
- 041 0_
- $a eng
- 044 __
- $a xxu
- 100 1_
- $a Horsák, Michal $u Department of Botany and Zoology, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic, Czech Republic. horsak@sci.muni.cz
- 245 10
- $a Diversity and biotic homogenization of urban land-snail faunas in relation to habitat types and macroclimate in 32 central European cities / $c M. Horsák, Z. Lososová, T. Čejka, L. Juřičková, M. Chytrý,
- 520 9_
- $a The effects of non-native species invasions on community diversity and biotic homogenization have been described for various taxa in urban environments, but not for land snails. Here we relate the diversity of native and non-native land-snail urban faunas to urban habitat types and macroclimate, and analyse homogenization effects of non-native species across cities and within the main urban habitat types. Land-snail species were recorded in seven 1-ha plots in 32 cities of ten countries of Central Europe and Benelux (224 plots in total). Each plot represented one urban habitat type characterized by different management and a specific disturbance regime. For each plot, we obtained January, July and mean annual temperature and annual precipitation. Snail species were classified into either native or non-native. The effects of habitat type and macroclimate on the number of native and non-native species were analysed using generalized estimating equations; the homogenization effect of non-native species based on the Jaccard similarity index and homogenization index. We recorded 67 native and 20 non-native species. Besides being more numerous, native species also had much higher beta diversity than non-natives. There were significant differences between the studied habitat types in the numbers of native and non-native species, both of which decreased from less to heavily urbanized habitats. Macroclimate was more important for the number of non-native than native species; however in both cases the effect of climate on diversity was overridden by the effect of urban habitat type. This is the first study on urban land snails documenting that non-native land-snail species significantly contribute to homogenization among whole cities, but both the homogenization and diversification effects occur when individual habitat types are compared among cities. This indicates that the spread of non-native snail species may cause biotic homogenization, but it depends on scale and habitat type.
- 650 _2
- $a zvířata $7 D000818
- 650 12
- $a biodiverzita $7 D044822
- 650 _2
- $a velkoměsta $x statistika a číselné údaje $7 D002947
- 650 12
- $a podnebí $7 D002980
- 650 _2
- $a zachování přírodních zdrojů $7 D003247
- 650 _2
- $a zavlečené druhy $x statistika a číselné údaje $7 D058865
- 650 _2
- $a hlemýždi $x klasifikace $7 D012908
- 651 _2
- $a Evropa $7 D005060
- 655 _2
- $a časopisecké články $7 D016428
- 655 _2
- $a práce podpořená grantem $7 D013485
- 700 1_
- $a Lososová, Zdeňka
- 700 1_
- $a Čejka, Tomáš
- 700 1_
- $a Juřičková, Lucie
- 700 1_
- $a Chytrý, Milan
- 773 0_
- $w MED00180950 $t PloS one $x 1932-6203 $g Roč. 8, č. 8 (2013), s. e71783
- 856 41
- $u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23936525 $y Pubmed
- 910 __
- $a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y a $z 0
- 990 __
- $a 20140704 $b ABA008
- 991 __
- $a 20140707113804 $b ABA008
- 999 __
- $a ok $b bmc $g 1031534 $s 862782
- BAS __
- $a 3
- BAS __
- $a PreBMC
- BMC __
- $a 2013 $b 8 $c 8 $d e71783 $i 1932-6203 $m PLoS One $n PLoS One $x MED00180950
- LZP __
- $a Pubmed-20140704