Fine scale patterns and drivers of plant species richness on a
sub-Antarctic island
Abstract
Cold environments, such as polar systems, are highly vulnerable to
global change drivers such as climate change and invasive species.
Therefore, it is essential to assess what drives the diversity of native
and invasive species in these systems. We investigated what drives
native and alien plant species richness on sub-Antarctic Marion Island
and determined the scale-dependence of these drivers. Native and alien
plant species richness was surveyed at “small” (1 m2) and “large” (9
m2) sampling grains. Difference in richness between the two sampling
grains was calculated to assess how local turnover contributes to
species assemblage. The factors driving richness at both grains, and the
differences in richness between the two grains, were analysed using
simultaneous auto-regressive models. Drivers related to energy and
environmental heterogeneity were correlated with native richness, whilst
drivers related to productivity were related to alien richness. Biotic
interactions with a cushion plant facilitated native richness, but
restricted alien richness at low elevations. Further, some drivers of
richness depended on spatial grain. Native richness was positively
related to northness at large, but not small grain size, suggesting that
higher northness increases local turnover at a grain size >
1 m2. On the other hand, topographical wetness index (TWI) boosted
native richness at small but not large grains, implying that competition
for water limits coexistence at low TWI (i.e., low moisture
availability) only at small grain. Differences in native species
richness between large and small grain sizes were more pronounced at low
elevations, suggesting higher compositional heterogeneity at low
altitudes. Our study highlights that drivers of plant species richness
in a polar ecosystem differ between native and alien plant species.
Additionally, the effects of some drivers on richness differ between
sampling grains, and considering these differences provides insight into
drivers of local patterns of species assemblage.