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Ellenberg Indicator Values Disclose Complex Environmental Filtering Processes in Plant Communities along an Elevational Gradient. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • EIVs indicate plant preferences for various environmental factors and can help understand how these preferences shape plant communities.
  • The study in Central Italy showed that as elevation increased, warm-loving species declined and cold-adapted species took their place, with different light preferences depending on elevation.
  • The research suggests that EIVs are valuable for studying how environmental gradients influence plant diversity, while pH and continentality showed no consistent patterns due to local variations.

Article Abstract

Ellenberg indicator values (EIVs) express plant preferences for temperature, light, continentality, soil moisture, pH, and soil nutrients, and have been largely used to deduce environmental characteristics from plant communities. However, EIVs might also be used to investigate the importance of filtering mechanisms in shaping plant communities according to species ecological preferences, a so far overlooked use of EIVs. In this paper, we investigated how community-weighted means (CWM), calculated with EIVs, varied along an elevational gradient in a small mountain in Central Italy. We also tested if species abundances varied according to their ecological preferences. We found that the prevalence of thermophilous species declines with elevation, being progressively replaced by cold-adapted species. Heliophilous species prevail at low and high elevations (characterized by the presence of open habitats), whereas in the middle of the gradient (occupied by the beech forest), sciophilous species predominate. Variations for moisture and soil nutrient preferences followed a similar pattern, probably because of the high moisture and nutrient levels of forest soils with a lot of humus. No distinct pattern was detected for EIVs for pH and continentality since these factors are subject to more local variations. These results highlight the possible role of EIVs to investigate how environmental gradients shape plant communities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9953212PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology12020161DOI Listing

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