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Lost and found: Short-term dynamics of the flora on 100 small islands in the White Sea
Affiliation:1. Department of Biology, Minot State University, 500 University Ave W, Minot, ND 58701, USA;2. Moscow South-West High School (No. 1543), 26 Bakinskikh komissarov str. 3-5, RU-119571 Moscow, Russia;3. Biological Department, Moscow State University, Vorob''evy Gory, RU-119899 Moscow, Russia;1. Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Botany, Zámek 1, 25243, Průhonice, Czech Republic;2. Charles University, Faculty of Science, Department of Botany, Benátská 2, 12800, Prague, Czech Republic;3. Pavol Jozef Šafárik University in Košice, Faculty of Science, Institute of Biology & Ecology, Department of Botany, Mánesova 23, 04001, Košice, Slovakia;4. National Museum, Department of Botany, Cirkusová 1740, 19300, Prague, Czech Republic;1. Key Laboratory of Aquatic Botany and Watershed Ecology, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;1. Department of Anthropology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;2. Division of Psychology, School of Social & Health Sciences, Abertay University, Dundee, U.K.;1. Sharif University of Technology, Graduate School of Management and Economics, Iran;2. University of British Columbia, Vancouver School of Economics, Canada
Abstract:The aim was to uncover factors that influence short-term (decade) flora dynamics and species richness of northern marine islets characterized by poor flora and weak anthropogenic pressure. The study used presence–absence data of vascular plant species on 100 small uprising islets of the Kandalaksha Gulf of White Sea (Northern Karelia, Russia). We investigated the influence of islands' attributes on species richness and rates of flora dynamics. Two island types were analyzed separately: younger, stone-like and older, islet-like (which generally are larger and have higher diversity of habitats). Sampled islands were studied via classical biogeographical per island approach and metapopulation per species approach. Stone-like islands had noticeably poorer flora with higher rates of immigration and extinction when compared to those of islet-like islands. The species number for islet-like islands correlated positively with number of habitats, abundance of different habitat types and island area. Species richness of stone-like islands correlated positively only with number of habitat types. Plant species associated with birds, crowberry thickets and coastal rocks were the most stable, and the species of disturbed habitats were significantly less stable. Floristic changes that have occurred have been caused by the massive establishment of new species rather than the extinction of pre-existing taxa. Thus, most of these islands are still in the colonization (assortative) stage. While we found no relationship between island area and species number for stone-like islands, this relationship was seen on islet-like islands.
Keywords:Island biogeography  Flora dynamics  Species–area relationship  White Sea
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