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Auteur Rudolf May |
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est un extrait de Biodiversity and climate change : achieving the 2020 targets / Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2010)
Titre : Climate change threats to biodiversity in Germany and Austria Type de document : Extrait d'ouvrage Auteurs : Stefan Nehring ; Ingrid Kleinbauer ; Stefan Dullinger ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Frank Klingenstein ; Rudolf May Année de publication : 2010 Importance : p. 57-59 Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=85760 Nehring, Stefan, Kleinbauer, Ingrid, Dullinger, Stefan, Essl, Franz (1973-), Klingenstein, Frank, May, Rudolf 2010 Climate change threats to biodiversity in Germany and Austria. In: Biodiversity and climate change : achieving the 2020 targets. SCBD, Montreal: 57-59.Documents numériques
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Résumé (2010)Adobe Acrobat PDF Widespread decline in Central European plant diversity across six decades / David Eichenberg in Global Change Biology, 27 (2021)
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Titre : Widespread decline in Central European plant diversity across six decades Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : David Eichenberg ; Diana E. Bowler ; Aletta Bonn ; Helge Bruelheide ; Volker Grescho ; David E. V. Harter ; Ute Jandt ; Rudolf May ; Marten Winter ; Florian Jansen Année de publication : 2021 Article en page(s) : 1097-1110 Langues : Français (fre) Résumé : Based on plant occurrence data covering all parts of Germany, we investigated changes in the distribution of 2136 plant species between 1960 and 2017. We analyzed 29 million occurrence records over an area of ~350,000 km2 on a 5 × 5 km grid using temporal and spatiotemporal models and accounting for sampling bias. Since the 1960s, more than 70% of investigated plant species showed declines in nationwide occurrence. Archaeophytes (species introduced before 1492) most strongly declined but also native plant species experienced severe declines. In contrast, neophytes (species introduced after 1492) increased in their nationwide occurrence but not homogeneously throughout the country. Our analysis suggests that the strongest declines in native species already happened in the 1960s–1980s, a time frame in which often few data exist. Increases in neophytic species were strongest in the 1990s and 2010s. Overall, the increase in neophytes did not compensate for the loss of other species, resulting in a decrease in mean grid cell species richness of −1.9% per decade. The decline in plant biodiversity is a widespread phenomenon occurring in different habitats and geographic regions. It is likely that this decline has major repercussions on ecosystem functioning and overall biodiversity, potentially with cascading effects across trophic levels. The approach used in this study is transferable to other large-scale trend analyses using heterogeneous occurrence data. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1111/gcb.15447 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=145980
in Global Change Biology > 27 (2021) . - 1097-1110Eichenberg, David, Bowler, Diana E., Bonn, Aletta, Bruelheide, Helge, Grescho, Volker, Harter, David E. V., Jandt, Ute, May, Rudolf, Winter, Marten, Jansen, Florian 2021 Widespread decline in Central European plant diversity across six decades. Global Change Biology, 27: 1097-1110.Documents numériques
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