Habitats along linear infrastructure, such as roads and electrical transmission lines, can have high local biodiversity. To determine whether these habitats also contribute to landscape-scale biodiversity, we estimated species richness, evenness and phylogenetic diversity of plant, butterfly and bumblebee communities in 32 4 km2 landscapes with or without power line corridors, and with contrasting areas of road verges. Landscapes with power line corridors had on average six more plant species than landscapes without power lines, but there was no such effect for butterflies and bumblebees. Plant communities displayed considerable evenness in species abundances both in landscapes with and without power lines and high and low road verge densities. We hypothesize that the higher number of plant species in landscapes with power line corridors is due to these landscapes having a higher extinction debt than the landscapes without power line corridors, such that plant diversity is declining slower in landscapes with power lines. This calls for targeted conservation actions in semi-natural grasslands within landscapes with power line corridors to maintain biodiversity and prevent imminent population extinctions.
Linear infrastructure habitats increase landscape-scale diversity of plants but not of flower-visiting insects
Juliana Dániel‐Ferreira,R. Bommarco,J. Wissman,Erik Öckinger
Published 2020 in Scientific Reports
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- Publication year
2020
- Venue
Scientific Reports
- Publication date
2020-12-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Geography, Medicine, Environmental Science
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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