Patterns of invertebrate biodiversity across a natural edge

被引:60
|
作者
Dangerfield, JM [1 ]
Pik, AJ [1 ]
Britton, D [1 ]
Holmes, A [1 ]
Gillings, M [1 ]
Oliver, I [1 ]
Briscoe, D [1 ]
Beattie, AJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Macquarie Univ, Key Ctr Biodivers & Bioresources, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia
关键词
Australia; boundary; ecotone; invertebrate assemblage; morphospecies; semi-arid; spatial scale;
D O I
10.1046/j.1442-9993.2003.01240.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Most ecologists are comfortable with the notion of habitats as recognizable entities and also with situations where the junction between two adjacent habitats forms a discrete edge. Such edges form naturally because of sharp changes in important edaphic, geomorphological, climatic or chemical properties to which plants, in particular, respond. Less clear is the effect of such edges on assemblages of mobile organisms, especially invertebrates that operate at relatively small spatial scales. The objective of the present study was to sample invertebrate composition across a natural edge between a well-developed riparian habitat on fluvial sands and a saltbush habitat developed on a stony gibber plain in a semi-arid region of New South Wales, Australia. A total of 150 pitfall traps on five 1-km-long transects that straddled the edge produced more than 13 000 adult specimens from 21 ordinal invertebrate taxa. A total of 10 446 beetle, ant, wasp, fly and springtail specimens were further sorted into 426 morphospecies. Comparisons and estimates of trends in abundance and richness were made, along with computation of multivariate dissimilarity and permutation statistics, to determine if the land system edge was coincident with changes in invertebrate abundance and composition. These analyses were unable to detect disjunctions in diversity coincident with the edge. The data suggest that many taxa are either present consistently in both habitats or are mostly found in one habitat but 'leak' several hundred metres across into the other. Few taxa were unique to either habitat. The result is that assemblage composition for invertebrates changes gradually over distances of up to 400 m either side of the edge and that the distance to a recognizable change in composition is taxon dependent. Even sharp habitat edges, as defined by discrete changes in soils and plants, are not edges but broad transition zones for many invertebrate taxa. There are several implications of these results, especially for landscape ecology.
引用
收藏
页码:227 / 236
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Patterns of benthic invertebrate biodiversity in intertidal seagrass in Moreton Bay, Queensland
    Barnes, R. S. K.
    REGIONAL STUDIES IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2017, 15 : 17 - 25
  • [2] Invertebrate biodiversity and conservation
    Eisenhauer, Nico
    Hines, Jes
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2021, 31 (19) : R1214 - R1218
  • [3] Proxies to detect hotspots of invertebrate biodiversity on rhodolith beds across the Southwestern Atlantic
    Lino, Jaqueline Barreto
    Laurino, Ivan Rodrigo Abrao
    Longo, Pedro Augusto dos Santos
    Santos, Cinthya Simone Gomes
    Motta, Fabio dos Santos
    Francini-Filho, Ronaldo B.
    Pereira-Filho, Guilherme Henrique
    MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2024, 196
  • [4] Patterns and drivers of aquatic invertebrate diversity across an arid biome
    Davis, Jenny
    Sim, Lien
    Thompson, Ross M.
    Pinder, Adrian
    Box, Jayne Brim
    Murphy, Nicholas P.
    Sheldon, Fran
    Moran-Ordonez, Alejandra
    Sunnucks, Paul
    ECOGRAPHY, 2018, 41 (02) : 375 - 387
  • [5] Invertebrate biodiversity, forestry and emulation of natural disturbance: A down-to-earth perspective
    Spence, JR
    Buddle, CM
    Gandhi, KJK
    Langor, DW
    Volney, WJA
    Hammond, HEJ
    Pohl, GR
    PROCEEDINGS: PACIFIC NORTHWEST FOREST AND RANGELAND SOIL ORGANISM SYMPOSIUM, 1999, 461 : 80 - 90
  • [6] Biodiversity patterns across the Late Paleozoic Ice Age
    Seuss, Barbara
    Roden, Vanessa Julie
    Kocsis, Adam T.
    PALAEONTOLOGIA ELECTRONICA, 2020, 23 (02) : 1 - 20
  • [7] Global patterns and predictors of marine biodiversity across taxa
    Derek P. Tittensor
    Camilo Mora
    Walter Jetz
    Heike K. Lotze
    Daniel Ricard
    Edward Vanden Berghe
    Boris Worm
    Nature, 2010, 466 : 1098 - 1101
  • [8] Investigating biodiversity patterns across scales in freshwater mussels
    Petersen, K. N.
    Wares, J. P.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2023, 32 (22) : 5891 - 5893
  • [9] Global patterns and predictors of marine biodiversity across taxa
    Tittensor, Derek P.
    Mora, Camilo
    Jetz, Walter
    Lotze, Heike K.
    Ricard, Daniel
    Vanden Berghe, Edward
    Worm, Boris
    NATURE, 2010, 466 (7310) : 1098 - U107
  • [10] Searching for the Achilles heel(s) for maintaining invertebrate biodiversity across complexes of depressional wetlands
    Pires, Mateus M.
    Garcia, Patricia E.
    Maltchik, Leonardo
    Stenert, Cristina
    Epele, Luis B.
    McLean, Kyle I.
    Kneitel, Jamie M.
    Racey, Sophie
    Batzer, Darold P.
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2023, 72