@article {Zechmeister:October 2001:0960-3115:1609, author = "Zechmeister H.G.", author = "Moser D.", title = "The influence of agricultural land-use intensity on bryophyte species richness", journal = "Biodiversity and Conservation", volume = "10", year = "October 2001", abstract = "
This study is a quantitative approach to the estimation of bryophyte species richness in relation to land-use intensity at three spatial scales in highly cultivated areas. A total of 460 randomly selected habitats and their various substrates within 29 study sites were investigated with regard to their land-use intensity and their bryophyte species richness in an agricultural region of eastern Austria. On bare soils (substrate-scale), low but regular disturbance increases bryophyte diversity in comparison to lower land-use intensity. However, more frequent disturbance (e.g. ploughing more than two times a year) dramatically reduces species richness at these sites, with more than 50% of these sites showing no bryophytes. The production of reproductive units (sporophytes and vegetative units) is highest at an intermediate disturbance regime. On the habitat, as well as on the landscape-scale, there is a significant increase in total bryophyte species number as well as in the number of threatened species with decreasing land-use intensity. This is mainly due to habitat and structural diversity, which increases with decreasing land-use intensity. There are significant correlations between landuse intensity, structural diversity and species richness at the habitat as well as on the landscape scale.
", pages = "1609-1625(17)", url = "http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/klu/bioc/2001/00000010/00000010/00320273" }