Published December 12, 2018 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: A barrier island perspective on species-area-relationships

  • 1. University of Göttingen
  • 2. Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg

Description

Predictions of species richness by island area are a classical cornerstone in ecology, while the specific features of barrier islands have been little appreciated. Many shorelines are occupied by barrier islands, which are shaped by offshore sedimentation processes and annual storm tide events. Hence, the appearance of these islands may vary between years if they are not protected by dykes. Here, we analyzed more than 2,990 species across 36 taxonomic groups (including vertebrates, invertebrates and land plants) on German barrier islands, the East Frisian Islands. We tested for relationships between species richness or species incidence and island area (SAR), island habitat diversity and further island parameters using a range of generalized linear and mixed-effects models. Overall species richness was explained best by habitat diversity (Shannon index of habitat types). Analyses on the occurrence probability of individual species showed that changes of barrier island area by sedimentation and erosion, i.e. barrier island-specific dynamics, explained the occurrence of 17 out of 34 taxa, including most beetles, plants and birds. Only six taxa such as spiders (249 species) and mammals (27 species) were primarily related to area. The diversity of habitat types was a key predictor for the incidence of twenty-five taxa, including ground beetles, true bugs and grasshoppers, amphibians and reptiles. Overall, richness and incidence of taxa differed greatly in their responses, with area (although varying from 0.1 to 38.9 km²) playing a minor and island heterogeneity a major role, while barrier island-specific sedimentation and erosion turned out to additionally explain species richness and occurrence.

Notes

Files

islands.txt

Files (623.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:caa1b6f574987502ed4583fda71c97a3
887 Bytes Preview Download
md5:ea683e60451f59675b33d0c9ca734153
622.4 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.4726 (DOI)