Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming

There is evidence to suggest that part of the recent changes in the lichen flora of the Netherlands is attributable to an increase in temperature. Changes which have occurred over the last 22 years were studied in detail, and were subjected to a statistical treatment by comparing the change of speci...

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Main Authors: van Herk, C.M., Aptroot, A., van Dobben, H.F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/long-tern-monitoring-in-the-netherlands-suggests-that-lichens-res
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spelling ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/316544 2024-01-28T10:03:30+01:00 Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming van Herk, C.M. Aptroot, A. van Dobben, H.F. 2002 https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/long-tern-monitoring-in-the-netherlands-suggests-that-lichens-res en eng https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/long-tern-monitoring-in-the-netherlands-suggests-that-lichens-res info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Wageningen University & Research Lichenologist 34 (2002) 2 ISSN: 0024-2829 flora monitoring broeikaseffect bryologie klimaatverandering korstmos vegetatie info:eu-repo/semantics/article Article/Letter to editor info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2002 ftunivwagenin 2024-01-03T23:16:30Z There is evidence to suggest that part of the recent changes in the lichen flora of the Netherlands is attributable to an increase in temperature. Changes which have occurred over the last 22 years were studied in detail, and were subjected to a statistical treatment by comparing the change of species to their latitudinal distribution and to ecological determinants. All 329 epiphytic and terrestrial lichen species occurring in the Netherlands were considered in relation to their world distribution. Arctic-alpine/boreo-montane species appear to be declining, while (sub)tropical species are invading. The proportion of increasing species is by far the largest among the wide-tropical lichens (83), and smallest among the arctic-alpine/boreo-montane lichens (14). None of the wide-tropical species was found to decrease, while 50 of the arctic-alpine/boreo-montane species show a decline. Long-term monitoring of the epiphytic lichen flora in the province of Utrecht from 1979 onwards shows that the total number of taxa present increased from 95 in 1979 to 172 in 2001, while the average number of taxa per site increased from 7.5 to 18.9. The rate of increase was greatest by far between 1989 and 1995. The majority of the species (152 taxa or 85) show a gross increase, only 17 species (10) show a decrease. :A detailed analysis of these data using multiple regression suggests global warming as an additional cause for recent changes, next to decreasing SO2 and increasing NH3. Changes appear to be correlated initially (1979-1095) only with toxitolerance and nutrient demand. Changes between 1995 and 2001, however, appear positively correlated to both temperature and nutrient demand, indicating a recent and significant shift towards species preferring warm circumstances, independent of and concurrent with changes due to nutrient availability. :This is the first paper reporting long-term floristic changes for lichens that appear to be correlated significantly with increasing temperatures. We suggest that future lichen monitoring ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Global warming Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivwagenin
language English
topic flora
monitoring
broeikaseffect
bryologie
klimaatverandering
korstmos
vegetatie
spellingShingle flora
monitoring
broeikaseffect
bryologie
klimaatverandering
korstmos
vegetatie
van Herk, C.M.
Aptroot, A.
van Dobben, H.F.
Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
topic_facet flora
monitoring
broeikaseffect
bryologie
klimaatverandering
korstmos
vegetatie
description There is evidence to suggest that part of the recent changes in the lichen flora of the Netherlands is attributable to an increase in temperature. Changes which have occurred over the last 22 years were studied in detail, and were subjected to a statistical treatment by comparing the change of species to their latitudinal distribution and to ecological determinants. All 329 epiphytic and terrestrial lichen species occurring in the Netherlands were considered in relation to their world distribution. Arctic-alpine/boreo-montane species appear to be declining, while (sub)tropical species are invading. The proportion of increasing species is by far the largest among the wide-tropical lichens (83), and smallest among the arctic-alpine/boreo-montane lichens (14). None of the wide-tropical species was found to decrease, while 50 of the arctic-alpine/boreo-montane species show a decline. Long-term monitoring of the epiphytic lichen flora in the province of Utrecht from 1979 onwards shows that the total number of taxa present increased from 95 in 1979 to 172 in 2001, while the average number of taxa per site increased from 7.5 to 18.9. The rate of increase was greatest by far between 1989 and 1995. The majority of the species (152 taxa or 85) show a gross increase, only 17 species (10) show a decrease. :A detailed analysis of these data using multiple regression suggests global warming as an additional cause for recent changes, next to decreasing SO2 and increasing NH3. Changes appear to be correlated initially (1979-1095) only with toxitolerance and nutrient demand. Changes between 1995 and 2001, however, appear positively correlated to both temperature and nutrient demand, indicating a recent and significant shift towards species preferring warm circumstances, independent of and concurrent with changes due to nutrient availability. :This is the first paper reporting long-term floristic changes for lichens that appear to be correlated significantly with increasing temperatures. We suggest that future lichen monitoring ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author van Herk, C.M.
Aptroot, A.
van Dobben, H.F.
author_facet van Herk, C.M.
Aptroot, A.
van Dobben, H.F.
author_sort van Herk, C.M.
title Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
title_short Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
title_full Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
title_fullStr Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
title_full_unstemmed Long-tern monitoring in the Netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
title_sort long-tern monitoring in the netherlands suggests that lichens respond to global warming
publishDate 2002
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/long-tern-monitoring-in-the-netherlands-suggests-that-lichens-res
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Global warming
genre_facet Arctic
Global warming
op_source Lichenologist 34 (2002) 2
ISSN: 0024-2829
op_relation https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/long-tern-monitoring-in-the-netherlands-suggests-that-lichens-res
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Wageningen University & Research
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