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Abstract
Scientific understanding of biodiversity dynamics, resulting from past climate oscillations and projections of future changes in biodiversity, has advanced over the past decade. Little is known about how these responses, past or future, are spatially connected. Analyzing the spatial variability in biodiversity provides insight into how climate change affects the accumulation of diversity across space. Here, we evaluate the spatial variation of phylogenetic diversity of European seed plants among neighboring sites and assess the effects of past rapid climate changes during the Quaternary on these patterns. Our work shows a marked homogenization in phylogenetic diversity across Central and Northern Europe linked to high climate change velocity and large distances to refugia. Our results suggest that the future projected loss in evolutionary heritage may be even more dramatic, as homogenization in response to rapid climate change has occurred among sites across large landscapes, leaving a legacy that has lasted for millennia.
How past climate change has affected biodiversity over large spatial scales remains underexplored. Here, the authors find marked homogenization in flowering plant phylogenetic diversity across Central and Northern Europe linked to rapid climate change and large distances to glacial refugia.
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1 Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland (GRID:grid.419754.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2259 5533)
2 Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland (GRID:grid.419754.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 2259 5533); ETH Zürich, Department of Environmental Systems Sciences, Landscape Ecology, Institute of Terrestrial Ecosystems, Zurich, Switzerland (GRID:grid.5801.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2156 2780)
3 University of Lausanne, Department of Computational Biology, Lausanne, Switzerland (GRID:grid.9851.5) (ISNI:0000 0001 2165 4204)