Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia

Abstract Orchids are potentially useful as ecological indicators because of their sensitivity to habitat fragmentation and anthropogenic disturbance. While many studies explore the effect of single factors on orchid diversity, few investigate how the extent, configuration, and condition of surroundi...

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Main Authors: Irene Martín‐Forés, Samantha L. Bywaters, Ben Sparrow, Greg R. Guerin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-04-01
Series:Conservation Science and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12652
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author Irene Martín‐Forés
Samantha L. Bywaters
Ben Sparrow
Greg R. Guerin
author_facet Irene Martín‐Forés
Samantha L. Bywaters
Ben Sparrow
Greg R. Guerin
author_sort Irene Martín‐Forés
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Orchids are potentially useful as ecological indicators because of their sensitivity to habitat fragmentation and anthropogenic disturbance. While many studies explore the effect of single factors on orchid diversity, few investigate how the extent, configuration, and condition of surrounding habitat affect whole orchid communities. Here, we unravel the effect of biological invasions, anthropogenic disturbance (i.e., grazing pressure, ecological condition), and habitat fragmentation on an Australian orchid community. We sampled 39 plots across nine sites in the Mount Lofty Ranges, Australia. We recorded the number of orchid species and number of individuals per species in mid‐winter, early‐spring, and late‐spring to account for the effect of season on species visibility, with 115 surveys in total. We ranked grazing intensity and ecological condition, and estimated cover of exotic species. We analyzed the response of richness and diversity through generalized linear mixed models, and differences in species composition through non‐metric multidimensional scaling. Habitat configuration in the surrounding landscape had different effects at increasing radii, explaining 29%–87% of variance. Patch‐level orchid diversity was positively correlated with habitat edges in the immediate area, and with habitat cohesion at medium scales, whereas diversity was negatively correlated with increasing mean patch habitat area across larger surrounding areas. Orchids co‐existed with exotic species but were negatively affected once exotic cover exceeded 20%. Species composition was correlated with exotic cover. Our findings reveal a complex relationship between orchid communities and their surrounding environments suggesting orchids benefit from a somewhat disturbed environment at patch and landscape scales. These idiosyncratic responses suggest orchid diversity may be unreliable as early‐warning indicators of habitat disturbance.
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spelling doaj.art-eb790d8d231c424893e60b9cd6e7dabb2022-12-21T23:55:19ZengWileyConservation Science and Practice2578-48542022-04-0144n/an/a10.1111/csp2.12652Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South AustraliaIrene Martín‐Forés0Samantha L. Bywaters1Ben Sparrow2Greg R. Guerin3School of Biological Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia AustraliaSchool of Biological Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia AustraliaSchool of Biological Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia AustraliaSchool of Biological Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia AustraliaAbstract Orchids are potentially useful as ecological indicators because of their sensitivity to habitat fragmentation and anthropogenic disturbance. While many studies explore the effect of single factors on orchid diversity, few investigate how the extent, configuration, and condition of surrounding habitat affect whole orchid communities. Here, we unravel the effect of biological invasions, anthropogenic disturbance (i.e., grazing pressure, ecological condition), and habitat fragmentation on an Australian orchid community. We sampled 39 plots across nine sites in the Mount Lofty Ranges, Australia. We recorded the number of orchid species and number of individuals per species in mid‐winter, early‐spring, and late‐spring to account for the effect of season on species visibility, with 115 surveys in total. We ranked grazing intensity and ecological condition, and estimated cover of exotic species. We analyzed the response of richness and diversity through generalized linear mixed models, and differences in species composition through non‐metric multidimensional scaling. Habitat configuration in the surrounding landscape had different effects at increasing radii, explaining 29%–87% of variance. Patch‐level orchid diversity was positively correlated with habitat edges in the immediate area, and with habitat cohesion at medium scales, whereas diversity was negatively correlated with increasing mean patch habitat area across larger surrounding areas. Orchids co‐existed with exotic species but were negatively affected once exotic cover exceeded 20%. Species composition was correlated with exotic cover. Our findings reveal a complex relationship between orchid communities and their surrounding environments suggesting orchids benefit from a somewhat disturbed environment at patch and landscape scales. These idiosyncratic responses suggest orchid diversity may be unreliable as early‐warning indicators of habitat disturbance.https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12652Australiacommunity compositionecological conditionecological indicatorexotic speciesgrazing
spellingShingle Irene Martín‐Forés
Samantha L. Bywaters
Ben Sparrow
Greg R. Guerin
Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
Conservation Science and Practice
Australia
community composition
ecological condition
ecological indicator
exotic species
grazing
title Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
title_full Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
title_fullStr Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
title_full_unstemmed Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
title_short Simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy, exotic species, and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in South Australia
title_sort simultaneous effect of habitat remnancy exotic species and anthropogenic disturbance on orchid diversity in south australia
topic Australia
community composition
ecological condition
ecological indicator
exotic species
grazing
url https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12652
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