AUTHOR=Li Dandan , Yuan Tonghe , Yang Jun , Lv Shan , Zhang Heng , Xia Yuzhu , Wang Xiao , Guo Shuiliang , Yu Jing TITLE=Positive effects of forest fragmentation per se on bryophyte diversity in subtropical fragmented forests: evidence from land-bridge islands JOURNAL=Frontiers in Plant Science VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/plant-science/articles/10.3389/fpls.2025.1539513 DOI=10.3389/fpls.2025.1539513 ISSN=1664-462X ABSTRACT=IntroductionHabitat fragmentation (Sensu lato) represents a landscape-scale process involving both habitat loss and the breaking apart of habitat (habitat fragmentation per se). In ecological studies, understanding the impacts of habitat fragmentation per se on biodiversity remains a critical challenge. While previous research has explored the effects of fragmentation on various ecosystems, significant gaps remain in our understanding of its impacts on bryophyte assemblages.MethodsTo explore the effects of habitat fragmentation per se on bryophyte assemblages in subtropical forests, we investigated bryophytes and environments on 18 fragmented forest landscapes (including 166 islands) in Thousand Island Lake, China. Landscape-level environmental variables of habitat fragmentation per se included island number, mean area, area variability, shape irregularity, shape variability, and isolation degree. Landscape-level habitat amount was represented by island total area within the study landscape. We investigated species richness (SR) and coverage in edge zones and interior environments of thirteen islands to explore the edge effects of fragmented forests on bryophytes.Results and discussionVariance partitioning revealed that habitat fragmentation per se independently explained 38.92% of variation in bryophyte SR and 36.5% of variation in species composition (SC). Landscape-level Island total area explained 6.2% of SR variation and 5.9% of SC variation. Among the environmental variables associated with fragmentation per se, island number and shape irregularity were identified as the most significant, independently explaining 16.2% and 15.5% of variation in bryophyte SR, respectively. Island shape variability and area variability independently explained 5.3% and 2.1% variations in bryophyte SR, respectively. A linear increase in bryophyte SR was observed with island mean area and shape irregularity, while a nonlinear relationship was detected with island number, island shape irregularity and area variability. Island area variability, shape variability and island number influenced bryophyte SC to similar extents, independently explaining 5.9% to 6.6% of variation in bryophyte SC. Consequently, habitat fragmentation per se had pronounced effects on both bryophyte SR and SC in subtropical fragmented forests. Such effects were likely due to the positive edge effects of fragmented forests on bryophyte assemblages. Our findings suggest that, in subtropical fragmented secondary forests, the reserve for bryophytes had better contain numerous forest patches with irregular shapes, large total area, and moderate variation in island shape and area.