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Nature Research, Nature Communications, 1(11), 2020

DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-17171-y

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Meta-analysis of multidecadal biodiversity trends in Europe

Journal article published in 2020 by Francesca Pilotto ORCID, Ingolf Kühn ORCID, Rita Adrian, Renate Alber, Audrey Alignier, Christopher Andrews ORCID, Jaana Bäck ORCID, Luc Barbaro ORCID, Deborah Beaumont, Natalie Beenaerts ORCID, Sue Benham ORCID, David S. Boukal ORCID, Vincent Bretagnolle, Elisa Camatti ORCID, Roberto Canullo ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractLocal biodiversity trends over time are likely to be decoupled from global trends, as local processes may compensate or counteract global change. We analyze 161 long-term biological time series (15–91 years) collected across Europe, using a comprehensive dataset comprising ~6,200 marine, freshwater and terrestrial taxa. We test whether (i) local long-term biodiversity trends are consistent among biogeoregions, realms and taxonomic groups, and (ii) changes in biodiversity correlate with regional climate and local conditions. Our results reveal that local trends of abundance, richness and diversity differ among biogeoregions, realms and taxonomic groups, demonstrating that biodiversity changes at local scale are often complex and cannot be easily generalized. However, we find increases in richness and abundance with increasing temperature and naturalness as well as a clear spatial pattern in changes in community composition (i.e. temporal taxonomic turnover) in most biogeoregions of Northern and Eastern Europe.