Premium
Calcicolous plants colonize limed mires after long‐distance dispersal
Author(s) -
Lönnell Niklas,
Hylander Kristoffer
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of biogeography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.7
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1365-2699
pISSN - 0305-0270
DOI - 10.1111/jbi.13180
Subject(s) - biological dispersal , mire , ecology , colonization , vascular plant , peat , obligate , biology , diaspore (botany) , bryophyte , colonisation , bog , seed dispersal , species richness , population , demography , sociology
Aim Dispersal range is a key factor for understanding species' persistence in dynamic landscapes. However, dispersal, especially over long distances, is inherently difficult to study. Making use of a unique system of anthropogenically disturbed, geographically isolated mires, we assessed dispersal ranges for a group of plants restricted to wet calcareous conditions via empirical studies of colonization patterns. We hypothesized that more species would have colonized the less isolated mires and that colonization frequencies would be related to traits influencing propagule pressure. Location Sweden. Taxon Calcicolous vascular plants and bryophytes. Methods The study system consisted of 52 acidic mires that had acquired a high pH through active liming by the Swedish government during the past two decades. These conditions killed off mat‐forming peat mosses, rendering the mires open to colonization by other species. In each mire, we recorded the presence of rich fen plant species typically found in high pH wet soils throughout the country. We used citizen science‐collected records of occurrences of obligate‐rich fen species surrounding each mire to examine the likely dispersal distances that were involved in creating the colonization patterns. Results A lower proportion of vascular plants than bryophytes from their respective species pools colonized the limed mires (27% vs. 67%, p = .001). The number of colonized rich fen species per site was 0–6 for vascular plants and 10–31 for bryophytes, and was positively related to potential diaspore sources >20 km from the mires ( p = .026 and p = .012, respectively). The proportion of colonized mires was positively related to the species' regional frequency, but not with their diaspores' terminal velocity. Main conclusions Many bryophyte species can effectively disperse over long distances (tens of kilometres) and variation among species in total diaspore production seems to be an important regulator of colonization across landscapes, for both vascular plants and bryophytes, in communities that are open to colonization.