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      Temporal turnover of the flora of lake islands: The island of Lake Pamvotis (Epirus, Greece)

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          Lake Pamvotis is one of the Balkan "ancient" lakes, a Quaternary refugium of great environmental importance and ecological value, that is under various anthropogenic pressures. It belongs to a Natura 2000 Special Area for Conservation and Special Protection Area. Almost in the middle of the lake, there is an inhabited island - one of the two lake islands in Greece – that also attracts touristic interest. Τhe main objectives of the present study are to provide a floristic inventory of the protected island, combining data of two different sampling periods, within a 25 year interval, in order to estimate temporal beta diversity and species turnover of the island’s plant diversity. The value of the absolute and relative turnover rates of the floristic diversity of the island studied are 4.24 and 1.72, respectively and are amongst the higher rates reported for plants. The absolute difference between extinct (E) and immigrant (l) taxa is to a great extent accounted, concerning life forms, by therophytes (1.86), hemicryptophytes (1.56) and geophytes (1.04) and, for habitats, by taxa preferring agricultural and ruderal forms (2.52).

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          Fifteen forms of biodiversity trend in the Anthropocene.

          Humans are transforming the biosphere in unprecedented ways, raising the important question of how these impacts are changing biodiversity. Here we argue that our understanding of biodiversity trends in the Anthropocene, and our ability to protect the natural world, is impeded by a failure to consider different types of biodiversity measured at different spatial scales. We propose that ecologists should recognize and assess 15 distinct categories of biodiversity trend. We summarize what is known about each of these 15 categories, identify major gaps in our current knowledge, and recommend the next steps required for better understanding of trends in biodiversity.
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            Buffered tree population changes in a quaternary refugium: evolutionary implications.

            A high-resolution pollen record from western Greece shows that the amplitude of millennial-scale oscillations in tree abundance during the last glacial period was subdued, with temperate tree populations surviving throughout the interval. This provides evidence for the existence of an area of relative ecological stability, reflecting the influence of continued moisture availability and varied topography. Long-term buffering of populations from climatic extremes, together with genetic isolation at such refugial sites, may have allowed lineage divergence to proceed through the Quaternary. Such ecologically stable areas may be critical not only for the long-term survival of species, but also for the emergence of new ones.
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              Avifaunal equilibria and species turnover rates on the channel islands of california.

              Insular species diversities, and their dependence on island size and isolation, have been postulated to represent a dynamic equilibrium between species immigration rates and species extinction rates. This interpretation has been tested by determining the land and freshwater birds breeding on the nine Channel Islands off southern California in 1968 and comparing the results with a similar survey for the years up to 1917. Most of the islands were found to be in equilibrium as to number of species, but between 17 and 62 per cent of the 1917 breeding species had disappeared by 1968, and an approximately equal number of new immigrant species had become established. Percentage turnover rates vary inversely as insular species diversities, with no effect of distance apparent.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Biodivers Data J
                Biodivers Data J
                1
                urn:lsid:arphahub.com:pub:F9B2E808C8835F47B2766D62129E4FF4
                urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:245B00E9-BFE5-4B4F-B76E-15C30BA74C02
                Biodiversity Data Journal
                Pensoft Publishers
                1314-2828
                2019
                21 August 2019
                : 7
                : e37023
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Institute of Systematic Botany, Section of Ecology and Systematics, Department of Biology, University of Athens, Athens, Greece Institute of Systematic Botany, Section of Ecology and Systematics, Department of Biology, University of Athens Athens Greece
                [2 ] Division of Plant Biology, Department of Biology, University of Patras, Patras, Greece Division of Plant Biology, Department of Biology, University of Patras Patras Greece
                [3 ] Goritsa Koutseliou Ioanninon, Ioannina, Greece Goritsa Koutseliou Ioanninon Ioannina Greece
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Maria Panitsa ( mpanitsa@ 123456upatras.gr ).

                Academic editor: Yasen Mutafchiev

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2388-3400
                Article
                37023 12131
                10.3897/BDJ.7.e37023
                6713668
                dd510dba-077e-43fc-852c-24718b273ce9
                Maria Sarika, Alexandros Papanikolaou, Artemios Yannitsaros, Theodoros Chitos, Maria Panitsa

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 10 June 2019
                : 12 August 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 2, References: 46
                Categories
                Research Article

                protected area,plant diversity,island diversity,turnover rate,monitoring,lake of ioannina

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