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Anette Edvardsen Rune Halvorsen Ann Norderhaug Oddvar Pedersen Knut Rydgren 《Landscape Ecology》2010,25(7):1071-1083
Habitat specificity analysis provides a tool for partitioning landscape species diversity on landscape elements by separating
patches with many rare specialist species from patches with the same number of species, all of which are common generalists
and thus provide information of relevance to conservation goals at regional and national levels. Our analyses were based upon
species data from 2201 patch elements in SE Norwegian modern agricultural landscapes. The context used for measuring habitat
specificity strongly influences the results. In general the gamma diversity contribution and core habitat specificity calculated
from the patch data set were correlated. High values for both measures were observed for woodland, pastures and road verges
whereas midfield islets and boundary transitional types were ranked low, as opposed to findings in traditional, extensively
managed agricultural landscapes. This is due to our study area representing intensively used agricultural landscape elements
holding a more trivial species composition, in addition to ruderals being favoured by fertility and disturbance, a finding
also being supported by the semi-natural affiliation index. Results obtained by use of checklist data from the same study
area diverged from patch data. Caution is needed in interpretation of habitat specificity results obtained from checklist
data, because modern agricultural landscapes contain several land types which are seldom surveyed by botanists, thus being
under-represented in the data set. We propose the use of core habitat specificity and gamma diversity contribution in parallel
to obtain a value neutral diversity assessment that addresses patch uniqueness and other properties of conservation interests. 相似文献
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