Partitioning of Ambrosia Beetle Diversity on Teak Plantations in Java']Java, Sumbawa, and Sulawesi Islands

被引:1
|
作者
Tarno, Hagus [1 ]
Setiawan, Yogo [1 ]
Wang, Jianguo [2 ]
Ito, Satoshi [3 ]
Mario, M. Bayu [4 ]
Kurahman, Taufik [1 ]
Suraningwulan, Medyanti [1 ]
Amaliah, Asri Ainun [4 ]
Sari, Nur Indah [4 ]
Achmad, Muhammad Alifuddin [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Brawijaya, Fac Agr, Dept Plant Pests & Dis, Jl Veteran, Malang 65145, Indonesia
[2] Jiangxi Agr Univ, Coll Agr, Dept Plant Protect, Nanchang 330045, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Miyazaki, Fac Agr, 1-1,Gakuen Kibanadai Nishi, Miyazaki 8892192, Japan
[4] Univ Hasanuddin, Fac Agr, Dept Plant Pests & Dis, Jl Perintis Kemerdekaan Km 10, Makassar 90245, Indonesia
来源
FORESTS | 2022年 / 13卷 / 12期
关键词
partitioning diversity; teak management; teak plantation; species richness and abundance; ambrosia beetle; thinning; COLEOPTERA-CURCULIONIDAE SCOLYTINAE; PTEROCARPUS-INDICUS WILLD; MOUNTAIN PINE-BEETLE; SPECIES-DIVERSITY; BETA-DIVERSITY; IPS-TYPOGRAPHUS; 1ST RECORD; FOREST; BARK; ABUNDANCE;
D O I
10.3390/f13122111
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Ambrosia beetles are the largest group of beetles living mutualistically with ambrosia fungi. Increased global shipments of forest and agricultural products have expanded the distribution of some species of ambrosia beetle. We investigated the partitioning diversity of the ambrosia beetle community on teak plantations in Indonesia's Java, Sumbawa, and Sulawesi Islands. The ambrosia beetles were collected on the twelve sites of teak plantations with different managements (un-thinned and thinned) in Java, Sulawesi, and Sumbawa Islands. Ambrosia beetles were collected ten times at 7-day intervals. The diversity of ambrosia beetles recorded in teak plantations across twelve sites in Java, Sumbawa, and Sulawesi Islands were 17 species and 6154 individuals. Xyleborus affinis (47.17%), Xylosandrus crassiusculus (27.64%), and Hypothenemus sp. (12.33%) were the three dominant species. The highest and lowest species richness were found in the teak plantations in Java and Sumbawa Islands, respectively. The highest and lowest populations of ambrosia beetles were in Sulawesi and Sumbawa islands, respectively. Three factors contribute to the species richness of ambrosia beetles, i.e., temperature, rainfall, and altitude. Stand age, temperature, rainfall, altitude, and teak management contribute to ambrosia beetle abundance. Ambrosia beetle communities among islands show differences between each group, as confirmed by analysis of variance based on homogeneity of multivariate dispersion (sig. 0.001) and permutation test for homogeneity of multivariate dispersions (sign. 0.001). For the group of teak managements, there are differences between both teak managements, as confirmed by analysis of variance based on homogeneity of multivariate dispersion (sig. 0.001) and permutation test for homogeneity of multivariate dispersions (sign. 0.01). Based on the eigenvalues for PCoA axes by the Bray-Curtis method, Sulawesi Island is separate from both Java, and Sumbawa islands. However, Java and Sumbawa islands overlap each other. For groups of teak managements (thinning and non-thinning), there are overlap with each other based on the eigenvalues for PCoA axes by the Bray-Curtis method. The beta(-1) (Within bottle trap/local scale) contributes the highest to gamma-diversity (42.46%). The relative contribution of species replacement (beta(-sim)) in multiple sites across Java, Sumbawa, and Sulawesi Islands (regional scale) provides a high contribution (85%) to overall beta diversity, and the relative contribution of beta(-nes) to the beta(-sor) among sites is 14.03%.
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页数:17
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