Aim: Empirical studies have often reported parallel patterns of genetic and species diversity, but the strength and generality of this association, as well as its origin, are still debated. Particularly in human‐dominated landscapes with complex histories of land use histories, more complicated and partly diverging patterns have been observed. In this study, we examine whether species and genetic diversity correlate across grasslands with different levels of land use pressure and spatial differentiation in habitat quality and heterogeneity. Location: We selected eight extensively used (grazed, unfertilized) dry grasslands and eight intensively used (mown, fertilized) hay meadows in southeastern Germany. Methods: We used vegetation ...
Context Land use change reduced calcareous grasslands throughout Europe during the last decades. Sub...
Succession theory argues that the taxonomic and functional structure of assembling communities is re...
1. Ecosystems with forest and grassland patches as alternative stable states usually contain various...
Aim: Empirical studies have often reported parallel patterns of genetic and species diversity, but ...
Biological diversity comprises both species diversity (SD) and genetic diversity (GD), and it has be...
Biological diversity comprises both species diversity (SD) and genetic diversity (GD) and it has bee...
The conservation of genetic diversity requires a deeper understanding of the processes shaping intra...
Global changes in land use are threatening the diversity of many ecosystems on both the intra- and i...
Background: Habitat fragmentation is considered to be a main reason for decreasing genetic diversity...
<div><p>Phylogenetic diversity (PD) has been successfully used as a complement to classical measures...
Genetic diversity is important for species’ fitness and evolutionary processes but our knowledge on...
European semi-natural grasslands are among the most species rich habitats in the world. They were hi...
Aim: High mountain regions exhibit a much stronger environmental heterogeneity and a more complex g...
Litter meadows, historically established for litter production, are species-rich and diverse ecosyst...
Context Land use change reduced calcareous grasslands throughout Europe during the last decades. Sub...
Succession theory argues that the taxonomic and functional structure of assembling communities is re...
1. Ecosystems with forest and grassland patches as alternative stable states usually contain various...
Aim: Empirical studies have often reported parallel patterns of genetic and species diversity, but ...
Biological diversity comprises both species diversity (SD) and genetic diversity (GD), and it has be...
Biological diversity comprises both species diversity (SD) and genetic diversity (GD) and it has bee...
The conservation of genetic diversity requires a deeper understanding of the processes shaping intra...
Global changes in land use are threatening the diversity of many ecosystems on both the intra- and i...
Background: Habitat fragmentation is considered to be a main reason for decreasing genetic diversity...
<div><p>Phylogenetic diversity (PD) has been successfully used as a complement to classical measures...
Genetic diversity is important for species’ fitness and evolutionary processes but our knowledge on...
European semi-natural grasslands are among the most species rich habitats in the world. They were hi...
Aim: High mountain regions exhibit a much stronger environmental heterogeneity and a more complex g...
Litter meadows, historically established for litter production, are species-rich and diverse ecosyst...
Context Land use change reduced calcareous grasslands throughout Europe during the last decades. Sub...
Succession theory argues that the taxonomic and functional structure of assembling communities is re...
1. Ecosystems with forest and grassland patches as alternative stable states usually contain various...