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Testing the Value of Six Taxonomic Groups as Biodiversity Indicators at a Local Scale
Authors:VASSILIKI KATI  PIERRE DEVILLERS†  MARC DUFRÊNE‡  ANASTASIOS LEGAKIS§  DESPINA VOKOU  PHILIPPE LEBRUN††
Institution:Department of Environmental and Natural Resources Management, University of Ioannina, Seferi 2, 30100 Agrinio, Greece, email; Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Section de Biologie de la Conservation, Rue Vautier 29, B-1000 Brussells; Ministère de la Région Wallonne, Centre de Recherche de la Nature, des Forêts et du Bois, Avenue Maréchal Juin 23, 5030 Gembloux, Belgium; Department of Biology, Zoological Museum, University of Athens, Panepistimioupolis, 15784 Athens, Greece; Department of Ecology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, UPB 119, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece; UniversitéCatholique de Louvain, Unitéd'Écologie et de Biogéographie, Centre de Recherche sur la Biodiversité, Place Croix du Sud 5, 1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
Abstract:Abstract:  We examined six groups of taxa—woody plants, aquatic and terrestrial herpetofauna, small terrestrial birds, orchids, and Orthoptera—to determine their efficiency as biodiversity indicators in the Dadia Reserve in northern Greece. We investigated the indicator value of each group by examining the degree of congruence of its species-richness pattern with that of the other groups and the efficiency of its complementary network in conserving the other groups and biodiversity. The two techniques differed in many respects in their outputs, but they both showed woody plants as the best biodiversity indicator. There was in general low congruence in the species richness patterns across the different groups. Significant relationships were found between woody plants and birds, Orthoptera and terrestrial herpetofauna, and birds and aquatic herpetofauna. None of the optimal complementary networks of the groups we examined protected all species of the other groups. Nevertheless, the complementary network of woody plants adequately conserved all groups except orchids. We conclude that the principle of complementarity must be integrated into the methodology of evaluating an indicator. In an applied context, our results provide a scientific background on which to base a biomonitoring program for the Dadia Reserve. In a wider scope, if the group of woody plants prove an adequate biodiversity indicator for other Mediterranean areas as well, this will be important because it will facilitate conservation-related decisions for the entire Mediterranean region.
Keywords:biodiversity  biomonitoring  indicators  Mediterranean  reserve
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