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Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution and abundance of small insects and arachnids in relation to structural heterogeneity of grazed, indigenous grasslands

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TLDR
The species composition and spatial distribution of small insects and arachnids and Araneae, Opiliones, and Pseudoscorpiones were investigated in three indigenous, upland grasslands identified as the National Vegetation Classification Festuca–Agrostis–Galium typical subcommunity.
Abstract
1. The species composition and spatial distribution of small insects (Hemiptera, Coleoptera, Lepidoptera) and arachnids (Araneae, Opiliones, and Pseudoscorpiones) were investigated in three indigenous, upland grasslands identified as the National Vegetation Classification Festuca–Agrostis–Galium typical subcommunity (code U4a), Festuca–Agrostis–Galium, Vaccinium–Deschampsia subcommunity (code U4e), and Nardus stricta species-poor sub-community (code U5a), on which grazing management was manipulated experimentally. 2. Two hypotheses were tested that predicted arthropod diversity in upland grasslands. The habitat heterogeneity hypothesis predicts that the species number and abundance of arthropods will have an asymptotic relationship with increasing numbers of plant species and greater structural heterogeneity in the vegetation. The symbiosis between patches hypothesis states that the species number and abundance of arthropods will express a unimodal relationship with the grain size of sward patches created by grazing. The sward patches must be large enough to be apparent to, and support populations of, arthropods, but small enough that interspersed tussocks provide shelter from weather and a deterrent to disturbance by grazers. 3. The hypotheses were tested by sampling arthropods from the geometrical patterns represented by the individual tussocks and intermediate sward components of three indigenous grasslands produced by different grazing treatments. Paired samples of arthropods were taken by motorized suction sampler, the first of the pair from the grazed sward and the second, the accumulated samples from the surrounding triad of tussocks (U4a and U5a grasslands) or hummocks (U4e grassland). The paired samples were taken from six randomly-selected locations across both replicates of each of the grazing treatments. 4. Arthropod species composition and abundance were compared between the paired sward and tussock samples and in turn with measures of the vertical and horizontal components of vegetation structure, i.e. the variance in vegetation height per unit area and the area covered by tussock compared with sward. 5. There were consistently more species and a greater abundance of arthropods associated with tussocks than with swards and the average species number and abundance for the combined pair of samples declined with increased grazing pressure. The relationship between vertical and horizontal components of vegetation structure and the species number and abundance of selected arthropods was asymptotic as opposed to unimodal, supporting the habitat heterogeneity hypothesis, rather than the symbiosis between patches hypothesis. 6. Small and relatively sedentary insects and arachnids are more sensitive to grazing intensity and species of grazer in these upland, indigenous grasslands than are larger Coleoptera and Araneae, which respond less directly to varied grazing management. The overall linear reduction of small herbivorous and predatory arthropods with increased grazing intensity was buffered in grasslands with substantial tussock patches.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Animal species diversity driven by habitat heterogeneity/diversity: the importance of keystone structures

TL;DR: It is shown that ecological effects of habitat heterogeneity may vary considerably between species groups depending on whether structural attributes are perceived as heterogeneity or fragmentation, and possible effects may also vary relative to the structural variable measured.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of grazing on the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation

TL;DR: A cell-based simulation model is built that features two competing plant species, different grazing patterns, and different sources of vegetation pattern to identify why grazing causes increases in the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation in some cases, but decreases in others.
Journal ArticleDOI

A literature review of insect responses to fire, compared to other conservation managements of open habitat

TL;DR: Characteristics associated with insect responses to fire related to the degree of exposure to lethal temperature and stress experienced in the post-fire environment, suitability of post-treatment vegetation as habitat, and ability to rebuild numbers in the site (from survivors and/or colonizers) appear equally useful for explicating insect responsesto other managements such as haying, mowing, and grazing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contrasting responses of plant and insect diversity to variation in grazing intensity

TL;DR: Insect diversity increased across the four treatments in the following order: intensively grazed, extensively grazing, short-term and long-term ungrazed grassland, and intensively and extensively grazed pastures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bottom-up control of carabid beetle communities in early successional wetlands: mediated by vegetation structure or plant diversity?

Ulrich Brose
- 20 Mar 2003 - 
TL;DR: The results indicate that bottom-up control is not mediated only by plant taxonomic or functional group diversity and that vegetation structures may be more important than previously suggested.
References
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Book

Ecological Diversity and its Measurement

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define definitions of diversity and apply them to the problem of measuring species diversity, choosing an index and interpreting diversity measures, and applying them to structural and structural diversity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diversity and Pattern in Plants and Insects

TL;DR: Plant-sucking bugs (Homoptera) of several old fields were studied Because they form a dominant group of insect herbivores in these communities, and because their diversity might be expected to be closely tied to that of plants, correlations between plant and insect diversity were generally weak.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships of plant and insect diversities in succession

TL;DR: It was found that up to a successional age of 16 months, the taxonomic diversities of plants and insects rose; thereafter the diversity of the plant species declined far more than the insect species diversity.
Book

Grasslands and montane communities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce mesotrophic grasslands and introduce calcifugous grasslands to calcicolous grassland and montane communities, and present a taxonomic index of synonyms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insect Communities, Grasses, and Grasslands

TL;DR: This review characterizes special features of grasses and grasslands and presents analyses of their insect communities that focus on annual and perennial grasses, small and long grass species, biotypes of diff erent habitat types, grasses grown from wild and commercial seeds, ectophages and endophages, and below- and aboveground herbivory.
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