Verlässliche Daten über unsere Lebens­grundlage

Die biologische Vielfalt bildet eine Lebensgrundlage der Schweiz. Deshalb ist es wichtig, ihren Zustand und ihre Entwicklung zu kennen. Zudem hat sich unser Land mit der Unterzeichnung der UN-Biodiversitätskonvention verpflichtet, die biologische Vielfalt langfristig zu überwachen. Zu diesem Zweck hat das Bundesamt für Umwelt BAFU das Biodiversitätsmonitoring Schweiz ins Leben gerufen.

Accelerated global biodiversity loss critically threatens forest ecosystem multifunctionality and service provision. Understanding environmental drivers across taxonomic (TD), functional (FD), and phylogenetic (PD) biodiversity facets is essential for effective conservation. However, the multi-dimensional nature of biodiversity is difficult to assess, and many studies overlook the interplay between functional traits and evolutionary history within a community. Here, we use Hill numbers to integrate TD, FD, and PD across five ecologically distinct taxa (birds, butterflies, snails, vascular plants, and mosses) to better understand environmental factors driving forest biodiversity in Switzerland. We included micro- and macroclimatic conditions, soil properties, topography, and vegetation structure and diversity. Our results highlight the intricate, taxon-specific nature of environmental effects on biodiversity. Across taxa, vegetation structure and diversity, and climatic factors emerged as key drivers of biodiversity facets, while soil characteristics mostly influenced less-mobile taxa. Vegetation structure and diversity acted as strong ecological filters shaping species richness and traits, reflecting responsiveness to short-term dynamics like disturbance or management, but were weak predictors of PD. Conversely, more temporally stable abiotic factors such as climate and soil conditions were consistent drivers across all facets, highlighting their broad impact on biodiversity. We show that FD and PD metrics complement TD by revealing additional insights into ecosystem functionality and evolutionary history. Given the differential responses of biodiversity indicators to environmental drivers, especially climate, maintaining ecosystem functionality and resilience under climate change requires assessments that go beyond taxonomic diversity and include the functional and phylogenetic dimensions.

Vigués Jorba, J., Scherrer, D., Duchenne, F., Zellweger, F., Gossner, M. M., & Bollmann, K. (2025). Differential responses of taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic multi-taxa diversity to environmental factors in temperate forest ecosystems. Ecological Indicators, 178, 113855. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2025.113855

Sonderheft Hotspot

Cover des Hotspot-Sonderhefts zu 20 Jahren Biodiversitätsmonitoring Schweiz.

Das Hotspot Sonderheft zu 20 Jahren BDM zeigt, wer hinter den Daten steckt und beleuchtet aktuelle Entwicklungen der Biodiversität.

Nationale Datenbanken

BDM-Daten mit den Artnachweisen werden an das jeweilige nationale Daten- und Informationszentrum weitergeleitet und in dessen Datenbank integriert. Die Daten der Gefässpflanzen gehen an Info Flora, diejenigen der Moose an Swissbryophytes und diejenigen der Tagfalter, Schnecken und Gewässerwirbellosen an info fauna.