4.7 Article

Changes in the epiphytic lichen biota of Bialowieza Primeval Forest are not explained by climate warming

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 643, Issue -, Pages 468-478

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.06.222

Keywords

Biodiversity; Climate change; Ecological indicators; Eutrophication; Old-growth; Trentepohlia

Funding

  1. Polish-Norwegian Research Programme [Pol-Nor/196829/87/2013]

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Epiphytic lichens are sensitive bioindicators responding to climate change and atmospheric pollutants. Climate warming changes in lichen biota have been reported from Western and Central Europe; therefore, similar trends in the biota of the close-to-natural forests of Eastern Europe were expected. In both examinations (1987-1989 and 2015-2016) of 144 permanent plots the same field method was used. The following functional epiphyte groups were distinguished: climate warming indicators (VDI species and species containing Trentepohlia algae) and Wirth's ecological indicators (T - temperature, N - eutrophication, R - reaction, M - moisture). PCA ordination for exploring species composition changes, species richness and diversity (Shannon-Wiener index) in different forest types was used. When compared with the earlier survey, a higher plot species richness, Shannon-Wiener diversity index, and proportion of more nitrogen-demanding lichens, and lower proportions of warm-demanding and high-acidity tolerant lichens were found. No change in the epiphyte biota composition influenced by the decreasing atmospheric precipitation was detected. The species richness and Shannon-Wiener index of climate warming indicators did not show a significant change. Although the share and frequency of epiphytic lichen species and their functional groups changed over a 25-year period, no relationship was found to be related to climate warming: indicators of global warming showed no significant change in frequency, while those with higher value of T even decreased frequency. The changes suggest a connection with eutrophication (increase in frequency of species with higher value of N) and a decrease in sulphur deposition (increase in frequency of species with higher value of R). (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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