HORSÁK, Michal, Tomáš ČEJKA, Lucie JUŘIČKOVÁ, Vollrath WIESE, Veronika HORSÁKOVÁ and Zdeňka LOSOSOVÁ. Drivers of Central European urban land snail faunas: the role of climate and local species pool in the representation of native and non-native species. Biological Invasions. 2016, vol. 18, No 12, p. 3547-3560. ISSN 1387-3547. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10530-016-1247-6.
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Basic information
Original name Drivers of Central European urban land snail faunas: the role of climate and local species pool in the representation of native and non-native species
Authors HORSÁK, Michal (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution), Tomáš ČEJKA (703 Slovakia), Lucie JUŘIČKOVÁ (203 Czech Republic), Vollrath WIESE (276 Germany), Veronika HORSÁKOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution) and Zdeňka LOSOSOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, belonging to the institution).
Edition Biological Invasions, 2016, 1387-3547.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 10600 1.6 Biological sciences
Country of publisher Netherlands
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Impact factor Impact factor: 2.473
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14310/16:00088340
Organization unit Faculty of Science
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10530-016-1247-6
UT WoS 000388579500014
Keywords in English Assemblage similarity; Europe; Large cities; Human-driven dispersal; Land snails; Local species pool
Tags AKR, rivok
Changed by Changed by: prof. RNDr. Michal Horsák, Ph.D., učo 8803. Changed: 16/2/2018 16:38.
Abstract
The importance of macroclimate and dispersal limitation in the broad-scale variation of European urban land snail assemblages is likely to differ between native and non-native species because of the southern origin of many non-native snails, often spread by humans.We sampled land snails in each of 32 European cities and compiled fromthe literature a list of land snail species reported from the surroundings of each city. To quantify the predictive power of climate and local species pools, beta-sim dissimilarity matrices of both native and non-native species were explored using MDS and RDA ordination methods, Mantel tests with bootstrapping of each dataset, and multivariate homogeneity analysis of group variances.We observed no significant relation between the numbers of non-native species found in the cities and their surroundings (p>0.133), while the percentage of native species in the cities derived from their local species pools decreased significantly with the increasing species richness of local faunas (rS = -0.75, p<0.001). Assemblage variation of urban native species was explained mostly by the difference between mean January and July temperatures (21.3 %), with the major role of July temperature (18.0 %). In contrast, variation of non-native species assemblages was mainly explained by January temperature (19.9 %). The congruence in faunal similarities between the cities and the surrounding areas was higher in native (r = 0.46, p<0.001) than in non-native species (r = 0.36, p<0.001). Overall native faunas were significantly more homogeneous than the nonnative faunas. Our results suggest that recent climate warming may foster geographical expansions of many non-native land snail species as their distributions are controlled mainly by January temperature.
Links
GA14-10723S, research and development projectName: Rostlinná společenstva měst: model vznikajících společenstev budoucnosti
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
MUNI/A/1048/2015, interní kód MUName: Velkoplošná analýza druhové variability evropských biotopů, jejich holocénní vývoj a dynamika (Acronym: VADVEB)
Investor: Masaryk University, Category A
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