Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China

abstract: Habitat fragmentation, the loss of habitat in the landscape and spatial isolation of remaining habitat patches, has long been considered a serious threat to biodiversity. However, the study of habitat fragmentation is fraught with definitional and conceptual challenges. Specifically, a mul...

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Other Authors: Wilson, Maxwell (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49099
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-490992018-06-22T03:09:18Z Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China abstract: Habitat fragmentation, the loss of habitat in the landscape and spatial isolation of remaining habitat patches, has long been considered a serious threat to biodiversity. However, the study of habitat fragmentation is fraught with definitional and conceptual challenges. Specifically, a multi-scale perspective is needed to address apparent disagreements between landscape- and patch-based studies that have caused significant uncertainty concerning fragmentation’s effects on biological communities. Here I tested the hypothesis that habitat fragmentation alters biological communities by creating hierarchically nested selective pressures across plot-, patch-, and landscape-scales using woody plant community datasets from Thousand Island Lake, China. In this archipelago edge-effects had little impact on species-diversity. However, the amount of habitat in the surrounding landscape had a positive effect on species richness at the patch-scale and sets of small islands accumulated species faster than sets of large islands of equal total size at the landscape-scale. In contrast, at the functional-level edge-effects decreased the proportion of shade-tolerant trees, island-effects increased the proportion of shade- intolerant trees, and these two processes interacted to alter the functional composition of the regional pool when the total amount of habitat in the landscape was low. By observing interdependent fragmentation-mediated effects at each scale, I found support for the hypothesis that habitat fragmentation’s effects are hierarchically structured. Dissertation/Thesis Wilson, Maxwell (Author) Wu, Jianguo (Advisor) Smith, Andrew (Committee member) Hall, Sharon (Committee member) Jiang, Lin (Committee member) Cease, Arianne (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Ecology Biodiversity Habitat Fragmentation eng 110 pages Doctoral Dissertation Biology 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49099 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Ecology
Biodiversity
Habitat Fragmentation
spellingShingle Ecology
Biodiversity
Habitat Fragmentation
Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
description abstract: Habitat fragmentation, the loss of habitat in the landscape and spatial isolation of remaining habitat patches, has long been considered a serious threat to biodiversity. However, the study of habitat fragmentation is fraught with definitional and conceptual challenges. Specifically, a multi-scale perspective is needed to address apparent disagreements between landscape- and patch-based studies that have caused significant uncertainty concerning fragmentation’s effects on biological communities. Here I tested the hypothesis that habitat fragmentation alters biological communities by creating hierarchically nested selective pressures across plot-, patch-, and landscape-scales using woody plant community datasets from Thousand Island Lake, China. In this archipelago edge-effects had little impact on species-diversity. However, the amount of habitat in the surrounding landscape had a positive effect on species richness at the patch-scale and sets of small islands accumulated species faster than sets of large islands of equal total size at the landscape-scale. In contrast, at the functional-level edge-effects decreased the proportion of shade-tolerant trees, island-effects increased the proportion of shade- intolerant trees, and these two processes interacted to alter the functional composition of the regional pool when the total amount of habitat in the landscape was low. By observing interdependent fragmentation-mediated effects at each scale, I found support for the hypothesis that habitat fragmentation’s effects are hierarchically structured. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Biology 2018
author2 Wilson, Maxwell (Author)
author_facet Wilson, Maxwell (Author)
title Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
title_short Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
title_full Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
title_fullStr Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the Impacts of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity Across Scales: The Case of Thousand Island Lake, China
title_sort assessing the impacts of habitat fragmentation on biodiversity across scales: the case of thousand island lake, china
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.49099
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