Effects of human trampling on abundance and diversity of vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens in alpine heath vegetation, Northern Sweden

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Abstract

This study investigated the effects of human trampling on cover, diversity and species richness in an alpine heath ecosystem in northern Sweden. We tested the hypothesis that proximity to trails decreases plant cover, diversity and species richness of the canopy and the understory. We found a significant decrease in plant cover with proximity to the trail for the understory, but not for the canopy level, and significant decreases in the abundance of deciduous shrubs in the canopy layer and lichens in the understory. Proximity also had a significant negative impact on species richness of lichens. However, there were no significant changes in species richness, diversity or evenness of distribution in the canopy or understory with proximity to the trail. While not significant, liverworts, acrocarpous and pleurocarpous bryophytes tended to have contrasting abundance patterns with differing proximity to the trail, indicating that trampling may cause shifts in dominance hierarchies of different groups of bryophytes. Due to the decrease in understory cover, the abundance of litter, rock and soil increased with proximity to the trail. These results demonstrate that low-frequency human trampling in alpine heaths over long periods can have major negative impacts on lichen abundance and species richness. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate that trampling can decrease species richness of lichens. It emphasises the importance of including species-level data on non-vascular plants when conducting studies in alpine or tundra ecosystems, since they often make up the majority of species and play a significant role in ecosystem functioning and response in many of these extreme environments.

Figures

  • Table 1 Species and groups divided into canopy and understory, at the Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden
  • Figure 1 Relative abundance (%) of different plants groups at 0.5, 2 and 5 m from the hiking trail in the Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden. Plants intercepted in the canopy layer were: deciduous shrubs, evergreen shrubs, forbs, grasses, sedges and rushes. Groups intercepted in the understory were: acrocarpous bryophytes, cushion evergreens, evergreen shrubs, lichens, liverworts, pleurocarpous bryophytes, litter, rock and soil, n =10.
  • Figure 2 Abundance, number of species, Simpson’s diversity index (D) and Brillouin evenness (HBe) for species in the canopy and understory at three different distances from the hiking trail in the Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden. Abundance in the A) canopy layer and B) understory, number of species in the C) canopy layer, and D) in the understory, Simpson’s diversity index in the E) canopy layer, and F) understory, Brillouin evenness in the G) canopy layer and H) understory. For species and plant functional groups, see Table 1. Mean value ± 1 S.E; n =10.
  • Table 2 Significant results from generalised linear mixed models (GLMM) explaining effects on abundance (count number per plot), and number of species at different distances from the hiking trail and at different directions in the Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden
  • Figure 3 Abundance (mean value ± 1 S.E.) of plant functional groups Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden. A-F show plant groups intercepte understory. For species and plant functional groups, see Table 1, n =10.
  • Table 3 Results of the Mann-Whitney U-test
  • Figure 4 Number of species (mean value ± 1 S.E.) of plant functional Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden. A-E show plant groups intercepte species and plant functional groups, see Table 1, n =10.
  • Figure 5 Ordination diagram of redundancy analysis (RDA) showing the variation in groups, distance from trail (solid black arrow and red text) and transects (red arrow and red text) in the Latnjavagge valley, northern Sweden. Groups in the canopy layer included deciduous shrubs, evergreen shrubs, forbs, grasses, sedges and rushes. Groups in the understory were: acrocarpous bryophytes, cushion evergreens, evergreen shrubs bottom, lichens, liverworts, pleurocarpous bryophytes, litter, rock and soil. For species and plant functional groups, see Table 1, n =10.

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APA

Jägerbrand, A. K., & Alatalo, J. M. (2015). Effects of human trampling on abundance and diversity of vascular plants, bryophytes and lichens in alpine heath vegetation, Northern Sweden. SpringerPlus, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40064-015-0876-z

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