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Nestedness describes patterns of species composition within continental biotas and among isolated habitats such as islands and landscape fragments. In a nested pattern, the species composition of small assemblages is an ordered subset (a true sample) of the species composition of large assemblages. Nested subsets of species are generated by environmental and ecological gradients, such as habitat quality, carrying capacities of sites, isolation, or fragmentation, that cause ordered sequences of species extinctions and colonization. Therefore nestedness analysis can be used to identify gradients that influence species composition and richness among sites and to identify species that run counter to these gradients (idiosyncratic species). Here I review the use of nestedness analysis to identify such gradients. I also describe how to perform the analysis and which metrics and null models to use for statistical inference.
Searching for spraints (excrements) and tracks is widely used for monitoring of European populations of otters Lutra lutra. Data collected in Central and Eastern Poland were analysed in order to evaluate the environmental factors affecting the detection of otter signs during field surveys. At each out of 1111 sites studied from 1996–1998 numbers of otter spraints and tracks as well as distance searched to detect first sign were noted. At each site several environmental variables were recorded to identify factors that may have affected the survey results. The variation in numbers of spraints and tracks found at each positive site was not related to the habitat quality and any other habitat features (including tree and shrub cover, presence of potential shelters) analysed, except the number of tracks was positively related to bridge potential. The distance searched was the most variable indicator of otter occurrence. It increased with the width of river and at sites with few potential sprainting sites, with bridges of poor potential or with no bridges at all, and where many signs of human and domesticated animals activity were noted. The results indicate that detection of otter signs is partially affected by specific elements unrelated to habitat potential and therefore numbers of spraints should not be used as an indicator of otter habitat preference. At a regional scale variation in number of spraints and tracks, as well as distance searched was related to otter occupancy expressed in the form of percentage of positive sites at three study areas. This study shows that measuring the distance searched provides additional indication of otter status at a regional scale and could be used to identify specific habitats where detection of otter signs during surveys is difficult.
The frequency distribution and density of three life stages as well as fitness components of the perennial plant Colchicum autumnale growing in the unmanaged road verges and in the extensive mown and grazed meadows in the Sudeten Mts. were studied. Furthermore, investigated were the effects of population size and plant size (measured as number of flowers) on reproductive success and explored if variation in reproductive and vegetative traits of adults could be associated with soil characteristics. The t-test indicated that proportions of subadults and reproductive adults were significantly lower in verge than in meadow populations, and of vegetative adults significantly higher. The plant density of reproductive adults and the reproductive adults to all adults ratio were significantly lower in verge populations compared to meadow populations. Although habitat type accounted for significant variation in stage structure, no significant difference was found between vegetative and reproductive traits in adult plants, except for the number of flowers. In verge populations the number of flowers was significantly lower as compared to meadow populations. The traits related to reproduction were not significantly influenced by population size. However, the proportion of flowers setting fruit decreased significantly with increasing number of flowers. The stepwise multiple regression revealed significant relationships between soil characteristics and number of fruits per plant, fruit set, number seeds per plant and number of leaves in vegetative adults. The results suggest that the creation of the low and relatively open vegetation cover could increase the chance of persistence of C. autumnale living in verge habitats by promoting of seed germination, seedling establishment and flowering, and they also show that the reproductive success and vegetative components of fitness are most likely influenced by habitat quality.
Pulsatilla patens has a circumpolar distribution from Eurasia to North America. This species occurs in the central and central-eastern parts of Europe, where is a rare and threatened species. In Poland, the largest number of sites is found in the north-east. A study on populations of P. patens was carried out in 2009–2010, at two wildlife refuges of the NATURA 2000 (N2000) network situated in North-Eastern Poland. Local names are following: the “Sejneńskie Lake District” (SLD) and the “Grasslands in the Military Training Grounds in Orzysz” (GMO). The current population structure of P. patens was estimated including the number, density and structure of different life cycle stages. Seventy-nine research plots of 2 m × 2 m were established at sites: dry heath, xeric sand calcareous grassland and pine forest. In each plot, all individuals were recorded and classified into life cycle stages: juvenile, vegetative and flowering individuals. The studies were carried out twice a year – in spring, during the full bloom of Easter pasque flower and in summer, in time of its fructification. The bioindication method was applied in order to determine the climatic and soil conditions of the habitats. Relationships were estimated between these population characteristics and habitat-related features such as the cover of phanerogams, cryptogams, litter, and bare soil. The population found on the GMO, was composed of 316 individuals which gives the density 6.4 ind. per plot while the one in SLD consisted of 202 individuals which gives the density 6.7 ind. per plot. The age structure of the populations proved that these were stable populations. This was evidenced by a large share of vegetative individuals – in both populations they prevailed (ca 64%). The highest share of juvenile individuals was noticed at the sites characterized by a moderate cover of cryptogams (21–35%). The analysis of correlations showed that on the non-forest habitats – dry heath and xeric sand calcareous grassland, the total number of individuals and number of vegetative individuals were negatively correlated with the cover of phanerogams and the cover of cryptogams. It was recorded negative impact of dense moss layer on the number of juvenile individuals. Moreover, the cover of litter had negative influence on the total number of individuals, number of juvenile and vegetative individuals. In contrast, the total number of individuals and number of juvenile individuals at that sites was positively affected by the cover of bare soil. A positive correlation was found between the number of vegetative individuals and phanerogams, and also between the number of juvenile individuals and the cover of bare soil at forest habitats. Negative impact on total number of individuals and the number of flowering individuals is exerted by the cover of cryptogams. Considering the ecological indicators set for the plant communities in which Pulsatilla patens appeared, it should be concluded that these were the habitats characterized by moderate light and moderately warm climate condition. Thecommunities with Pulsatilla patens grew on dry and fresh soils, oligotrophic and mesotrophic ones, composed of sand and argillaceous clay. The pH ranging was from moderately acidic to neutral. The analysis of the age structure of the examined populations, the latter can be said to be stable. It can therefore be assumed that the Eastern pasque flower has met the favorable habitat conditions at the analyzed sites, therefore it is justifiable to claim that these sites will exist in the future and will constitute an important part of the resources of this species in Poland.
The main goal of this study was to determine the reason for the significant increase of the tawny owl Strix aluco population in Kozłówka Forest near Lubartów (51°30' N, 22°35' E) in eastern Poland. Since 1990, this forest complex has been part of Kozłowiecki Landscape Park. Our research was conducted using standard playback method on a sample plot covering 50 km2. Each year in March and April 1990-91 and 2007-09, three counts with vocal stimulation were performed on the study plot. Between 1991 and 2009, a significant increase in the density of the tawny owl population was observed from 2.4 pairs/10 km2 to 4.6 pairs/10 km2. We discuss how habitat quality, food availability, and weather conditions can explain this phenomenon.
In order to investigate the most appropriate sampling to assess habitat effects on red deer, we analysed body mass, diastema length and length of the posterior part of the lower jaw of red deer females Cervus elaphus (Linnaeus 1758) in five study areas of the Ardennes (Belgium). Canonical discriminant analysis indicated that the female deer from the 5 study areas could be distinguished from each other on the basis of their body mass, diastema length and posterior length of the lower jaw. Body mass was the most correlated with the first canonical variable, while diastema length and posterior length of the lower jaw were less although significantly correlated. Age- -specific comparisons of means indicated that variations in body mass, diastema length and posterior length of the lower jaw of yearlings and > 4-year-old females were the most effective to separate the different populations and hence were good indices of respectively short and long term variations in environmental conditions. Univariate comparison of means suggested that posterior length of the lower jaw of yearlings could be a valuable alternative to body weight as an indice of habitat quality. The Von Bertalanffy growth equation with to fixed was used to assess the effect of habitat on asymptotic body mass and asymptotic jaw length and on the growth coefficients. The asymptotic values for body mass and jaw length were significantly higher where the habitat conditions appeared to be most favourable. In the poorest habitat, the growth of body mass and jaw length appeared slower, suggesting that female red deer, in this poorer habitat, could partially compensate their lower development as calves and yearlings by a longer growth period; however, only the growth coefficient of the posterior length of the lower jaw differed significantly from that of the best habitat.
The data obtained within the framework of a survey of macrozoobenthos and fish communities in Czech streams of the Danube and Elbe river basins were evaluated with respect to the relation between biodiversity and level of water (organic pollution) and/or physical habitat quality (heterogeneity, substrate, riparian vegetation, canalisation). The diversity of macrozoobenthos species was the highest at the water quality corresponding to betamesosaprobity (saprobiological index SI ≈ 2,0) and oligosaprobity (SI ≈ 1,0) in lowland and highland streams respectively, declining both towards lower and higher saprobic (≈ trophic) levels. The response of macrozoobenthos to habitat quality deterioration was less considerable with rising degradation in highland streams than in lowland ones. Fish assemblage followed a similar trend, namely: the highest biodiversity in betamezosaprobity in both lowland and highland streams. In comparison with the assemblage of benthic macroinvertebrates, fish community response was more pronounced both regarding water quality and habitat degradation. Both fish and macrozoobenthos biodiversity were influenced more by water quality than by physical habitat degradation.
Hydroacoustical methods due to their very high resolution in time and space can be used to register subtle changes in fish distribution and behaviour, thus enabling observation of the effect of habitat modification upon the fish. A number of examples have been presented which show dependence between fish parameters measured acoustically (such as depth, density, degree of aggregation, length frequency distribution), and different environmental parameters characterising the habitat quality (trophic levels, presence of chemicals, littoral coverage, predation pressure, temperature and oxygen gradients). This suggest that by performing hydroacoustical monitoring one can measure fish reactions to the habitat changes on a scale and with an accuracy not available with other methods.
The paper presents a community of water plants that is new to Poland, Veronico beccabungae-Callitrichetum stagnalis (Oberd. 1957) Müller 1962. This community belongs to the class Potametea. It was discovered in the village of Odrowąż near the town of Krapkowice in Silesia (SW Poland). Veronico beccabungae-Callitrichetum stagnalis in Poland occurs within an irregularly shaped shallow underwater spring, located in the distal part of the Oder River’s flood terrace. This plant community covered 0.2 ha in 2008. Callitriche stagnalis predominated in this community. Species such as Callitriche hamulata and Callitriche verna occurred less frequently. An average of five species were counted in a relevé. Alkaline sediments (pH 8.03) occur in the substratum, but sediments with a lower pH value (7.73) occur in the spring’s outflow zone towards the Odra River. Water in the spring, where Veronico beccabungae-Callitrichetum stagnalis occurred, has a medium mineralisation but is rich in dissolved compounds. The condition of this community within the studied habitat could be evidence for highly adaptive abilities and this community's good adjustment to the natural conditions. Veronico beccabungae-Callitrichetum stagnalis is a rare and endangered plant community in Central Europe. The locality of this plant community in Poland should be given species protection.
The main objective of this paper was to investigate factors that affect bird species diversity at local spatial scales including the role of habitat heterogeneity. The studies were carried out in a mosaic landscape of southern Poland, in habitat fragments, each described by variables which characterised the size of the plot and its spatial structure, including vegetation. A species diversity index was then calculated for each plot using Shannon-Wiener index, based on count of nesting birds obtained through territory mapping method. Correspondence analysis (CA) was then used to illustrate relationships between groups of plots of different scopes of species diversity and the measured characteristics of the plots. The high diversity among birds was found to be primarily connected with an increase in the proportion of old forest, whereas the diversity decreased with an increase in the proportion of ‘farmland’ (including meadows and pastures). Other significant effects on the changes in species diversity were exerted by the degree of density in the herb layer and the tree canopy layer, as well as by the presence of wetlands. The localscale inertia in the heterogeneous-type habitats results primarily from the differences in quality and structure of the plot, which reflect their position between the ‘forest’ – ‘non-forest’ gradient. In the studied range of sizes (0.2–40 ha), the size of a given plot is of lesser significance than that of the vegetation structure. All the variables which represent potential effects upon the local-scale diversity of birds, and the suitability of CA are discussed against the background of the results of this study and available literature data.
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