Disturbance and topography shape the capacity of microrefugia to support unique biodiversity
Publication Name: Ecological Indicators
Publication Date: 2026-04-01
Volume: 185
Issue: Unknown
Page Range: Unknown
Description:
Microrefugia play a key role in facilitating the persistence of biodiversity during climate change. Many occur in topographically complex landscapes shaped by various disturbances, but we know little about how the combined effects of topography and disturbance affect the capacity of refugia to support biodiversity. To better understand this, we inventoried taxonomic richness across four biological groups (soil microbiota, vascular plants, terrestrial snails, and ants), as well as climatic and soil conditions, in different microhabitats (south-facing slopes, north-facing slopes, and bottoms) of topographic depressions (dolines) and on the surrounding plateaus. Unique species assemblages and cooler, moister microclimatic conditions in dolines supported their importance as biodiversity hotspots and microrefugia. Relationships between indicators of disturbances (anthropogenic: historical logging; natural: canopy gaps) and species richness differed, depending on the biological group and microhabitat. While most biological groups seemingly recovered within 50 years following clear-felling, plants did not, highlighting the persistent impact of anthropogenic disturbances on refugial capacity. Plants were also the only group that displayed a significant response to the presence of small canopy gaps at doline bottoms, which promoted the occurrence of specific plant species. All biological groups displayed some response to microhabitats, although these responses differed among taxa. Therefore, high environmental heterogeneity appears to help facilitate the role of dolines as biodiversity hotspots and microrefugia. We conclude that the direction and magnitude of the effects of disturbances and topography are taxon-specific, due to species-specific responses to microenvironmental conditions. Disturbance history is an important consideration when identifying refugia for climate change management.
Open Access: Yes
Authors - 19
Károly Barta
12752243900
Gunnar Keppel
15026651500
Zoltán Bátori
26031263200
Barna Páll-Gergely
35488826000
Roland Wirth
37121224000
Gábor Lőrinczi
54412736000
Csaba Tölgyesi
55516418300
István Elek Maák
56105818500
Gergely Maróti
56408420600
Attila Bodor
57189347229
Kata Frei
57216971443
Ádám Lőrincz
57220054572
Gábor Li
58102570400
Bonita Ratkai
58631719200
Viktor Környei
60511532200
Éva Karasz
60511795800
Édua Kun-Péter
60511795900
Zsófia Krivács
60512054000
Nóra Molnár
6505901105