Road edge effects on litter invertebrate communities of subtropical forests

被引:9
|
作者
Delgado, Juan D. [1 ]
Arroyo, Natalia L. [1 ]
Arevalo, Jose R. [2 ]
Fernandez-Palacios, Jose M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pablo de Olavide, Dept Sistemas Fis Quim & Nat, Area Ecol, Seville, Spain
[2] Univ La Laguna, Dept Ecol, E-38206 Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
关键词
arthropods; non-arthropod invertebrates; laurisilva; Pinus canariensis; rarefaction; VEGETATION RESPONSES; LAUREL FOREST; TENERIFE; DIVERSITY; GRADIENTS; BIODIVERSITY; PATTERNS; BARRIERS; HABITAT; TERRESTRIAL;
D O I
10.1080/00222933.2012.743610
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
We assessed road edge effects on leaf-litter macroinvertebrates in laurel and pine forests in Tenerife (Canary Islands), studying composition, abundance, richness and diversity, and the role of environmental gradients. We sorted species to the finest taxonomic resolution possible and used a morphospecies approach when necessary. In all, 15,824 invertebrates were identified from 388 litter samples (from >500 species, five major phyla and 31 orders). Alien invasive species of Oligochaeta, Pulmonata, Isopoda, Diplopoda and Hymenoptera were frequent in both forests. Richness, diversity and rarefaction pointed to a disturbance threshold within the first 10m off the road, and edge effects were steeper in laurel forest than in pine forest. Overabundant aliens were partially responsible for highly disturbed litter assemblages on this edge zone in both forests. Proximity to road edge caused gradients of disturbance of forest structure. Litter moisture, rock and litter cover in laurel forest, and grass and canopy cover in pine forest were the best predictors of community variation. Results seemed to give some empirical support to the intermediate disturbance hypothesis. This altered road edge zone may accumulate regionally causing net reductions of ecosystem area and quality, impacting on its integrity and biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页码:203 / 236
页数:34
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Invasive litter, not an invasive insectivore, determines invertebrate communities in Hawaiian forests
    Tuttle, Nathania C.
    Beard, Karen H.
    Pitt, William C.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2009, 11 (04) : 845 - 855
  • [2] Invasive litter, not an invasive insectivore, determines invertebrate communities in Hawaiian forests
    Nathania C. Tuttle
    Karen H. Beard
    William C. Pitt
    [J]. Biological Invasions, 2009, 11 : 845 - 855
  • [3] LITTER INVERTEBRATE COMMUNITIES IN PINE FORESTS OF DIFFERENT AGE (BARANIVKA AREA, UKRAINE)
    Kalynovskyi, Nazar
    [J]. RESEARCH FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT 2012, VOL 2, 2012, : 14 - 20
  • [4] Native Bamboo Invasions into Subtropical Forests Alter Microbial Communities in Litter and Soil
    Tian, Xiao-Kun
    Wang, Min-Yan
    Meng, Ping
    Zhang, Jin-Song
    Zhou, Ben-Zhi
    Ge, Xiao-Gai
    Yu, Fei-Hai
    Li, Mai-He
    [J]. FORESTS, 2020, 11 (03):
  • [5] Macro invertebrate communities in reed litter
    Varga, I
    Berczik, A
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF THEORETICAL AND APPLIED LIMNOLOGY, VOL 27, PT 6, PROCEEDINGS, 2002, 27 : 3566 - 3569
  • [6] Warming effects on the decomposition of two litter species in model subtropical forests
    Juxiu Liu
    Shuange Liu
    Yiyong Li
    Shizhong Liu
    Guangcai Yin
    Juan Huang
    Yue Xu
    Guoyi Zhou
    [J]. Plant and Soil, 2017, 420 : 277 - 287
  • [7] Warming effects on the decomposition of two litter species in model subtropical forests
    Liu, Juxiu
    Liu, Shuange
    Li, Yiyong
    Liu, Shizhong
    Yin, Guangcai
    Huang, Juan
    Xu, Yue
    Zhou, Guoyi
    [J]. PLANT AND SOIL, 2017, 420 (1-2) : 277 - 287
  • [8] The responses of leaf litter invertebrates to environmental gradients along road edges in subtropical island forests
    Delgado, Juan D.
    Morales, Gustavo M.
    Arroyo, Natalia L.
    Fernandez-Palacios, Jose M.
    [J]. PEDOBIOLOGIA, 2013, 56 (03) : 137 - 146
  • [9] Edge and herbivory effects on leaf litter decomposability in a subtropical dry forest
    Moreno, Maria Laura
    Rossetti, Maria Rosa
    Perez-Harguindeguy, Natalia
    Valladares, Graciela Rosa
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2017, 32 (03) : 341 - 346
  • [10] Indigenous forests versus exotic eucalypt and pine plantations:: a comparison of leaf-litter invertebrate communities
    Ratsirarson, H
    Robertson, HG
    Picker, MD
    van Noort, S
    [J]. AFRICAN ENTOMOLOGY, 2002, 10 (01) : 93 - 99