Species richness-environment relationships of European arthropods at two spatial grains: habitats and countries

PLoS One. 2012;7(9):e45875. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045875. Epub 2012 Sep 24.

Abstract

We study how species richness of arthropods relates to theories concerning net primary productivity, ambient energy, water-energy dynamics and spatial environmental heterogeneity. We use two datasets of arthropod richness with similar spatial extents (Scandinavia to Mediterranean), but contrasting spatial grain (local habitat and country). Samples of ground-dwelling spiders, beetles, bugs and ants were collected from 32 paired habitats at 16 locations across Europe. Species richness of these taxonomic groups was also determined for 25 European countries based on the Fauna Europaea database. We tested effects of net primary productivity (NPP), annual mean temperature (T), annual rainfall (R) and potential evapotranspiration of the coldest month (PET(min)) on species richness and turnover. Spatial environmental heterogeneity within countries was considered by including the ranges of NPP, T, R and PET(min). At the local habitat grain, relationships between species richness and environmental variables differed strongly between taxa and trophic groups. However, species turnover across locations was strongly correlated with differences in T. At the country grain, species richness was significantly correlated with environmental variables from all four theories. In particular, species richness within countries increased strongly with spatial heterogeneity in T. The importance of spatial heterogeneity in T for both species turnover across locations and for species richness within countries suggests that the temperature niche is an important determinant of arthropod diversity. We suggest that, unless climatic heterogeneity is constant across sampling units, coarse-grained studies should always account for environmental heterogeneity as a predictor of arthropod species richness, just as studies with variable area of sampling units routinely consider area.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ants*
  • Biodiversity*
  • Climate
  • Coleoptera*
  • Europe
  • Hemiptera*
  • Models, Biological
  • Spiders*

Grants and funding

The sampling and the research of SB, TH, SK, WN and OS were supported by the EC FP6 ALARM Project (GOCE-CT-2003-506675) and the FP7 SCALES Project (grant 226 852). XE was supported by MEC-FEDER CGL2007-64080-C02-01. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.