The effects of forest disturbance on diversity of tropical soil nematodes

被引:94
|
作者
Bloemers, GF
Hodda, M
Lambshead, PJD
Lawton, JH
Wanless, FR
机构
[1] UNIV LONDON IMPERIAL COLL SCI TECHNOL & MED,NERC,CTR POPULAT BIOL,ASCOT SL5 7PY,BERKS,ENGLAND
[2] NAT HIST MUSEUM,DEPT ZOOL,LONDON SW7 5BD,ENGLAND
关键词
nematodes; trophic groups; population abundance; species richness;
D O I
10.1007/s004420050274
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We provide the first account of the effects of forest disturbance on species richness of nematodes in tropical forest soils, from 24 sites along gradients of disturbance and regeneration in the Mbalmayo Forest Reserve, Cameroon. Species richness was very high. Samples of 200 nematodes from individual soil cores contained a maximum of 89 and an average of 61 species; in total we recorded 431 species and approximately 194 genera. The model of Siemann et al. (1996), predicting that species richness scales as the number of individuals I-0.5, underestimates nematode diversity 4-6 fold in these samples. Over 90% of specimens cannot be assigned to known species. Although nematode species richness declined with forest disturbance, statistically significant effects were detectable only under the most extreme conditions (active slash-and-burn agriculture and complete mechanical forest clearance) and even here remained at 40% of the richness of near primary sites. Impacts on trophic structure were also small, and there were no significant changes in the maturity index (MI) (Bongers 1990) with disturbance (mean MI across all treatments was very high, at 3.58). In the light of this study, the problems of completing reliable all-taxon inventories in tropical forests are briefly discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:575 / 582
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Tropical forest structure and diversity in relation to altitude and disturbance in a Biosphere Reserve in central India
    Sahu, P. K.
    Sagar, R.
    Singh, J. S.
    [J]. APPLIED VEGETATION SCIENCE, 2008, 11 (04) : 461 - 470
  • [42] Disturbance and clonal reproduction determine liana distribution and maintain liana diversity in a tropical forest
    Ledo, Alicia
    Schnitzer, Stefan A.
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2014, 95 (08) : 2169 - 2178
  • [43] Tropical forest diversity, environmental change and species augmentation: After the intermediate disturbance hypothesis
    Sheil, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE, 1999, 10 (06) : 851 - 860
  • [44] The indirect effects of habitat disturbance on the bird communities in a tropical African forest
    Christos Mammides
    Matthias Schleuning
    Katrin Böhning-Gaese
    Gertrud Schaab
    Nina Farwig
    Costas Kadis
    Tim Coulson
    [J]. Biodiversity and Conservation, 2015, 24 : 3083 - 3107
  • [45] EFFECTS OF FOREST CONVERSION ON THE CARBON BUDGET OF A TROPICAL SOIL
    RAICH, JW
    [J]. BIOTROPICA, 1983, 15 (03) : 177 - 184
  • [46] The indirect effects of habitat disturbance on the bird communities in a tropical African forest
    Mammides, Christos
    Schleuning, Matthias
    Boehning-Gaese, Katrin
    Schaab, Gertrud
    Farwig, Nina
    Kadis, Costas
    Coulson, Tim
    [J]. BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2015, 24 (12) : 3083 - 3107
  • [47] Ecological and biogeographical effects of forest disturbance on tropical butterflies of Sumba, Indonesia
    Hamer, KC
    HIll, JK
    Lace, LA
    Langan, AM
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 1997, 24 (01) : 67 - 75
  • [48] Effects of hurricane disturbance on a tropical dry forest canopy in western Mexico
    Parker, Geoffrey
    Martinez-Yrizar, Angelina
    Alvarez-Yepiz, Juan C.
    Maass, Manuel
    Araiza, Salvador
    [J]. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2018, 426 : 39 - 52
  • [49] Warming and disturbance alter soil microbiome diversity and function in a northern forest ecotone
    Van Nuland, Michael E.
    Smith, Dylan P.
    Bhatnagar, Jennifer M.
    Stefanski, Artur
    Hobbie, Sarah E.
    Reich, Peter B.
    Peay, Kabir G.
    [J]. FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2020, 96 (07)
  • [50] Understanding the effects of human disturbance on scorpion diversity in Brazilian tropical forests
    André F. A. Lira
    Stênio I. A. Foerster
    Renato P. Salomão
    Tiago J. Porto
    Cleide M. R. Albuquerque
    Geraldo J. B. Moura
    [J]. Journal of Insect Conservation, 2021, 25 : 147 - 158