4.3 Article

Influence of Selected Environmental Parameters on Rove Beetle (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) Communities in Central European Floodplain Forests

Journal

WETLANDS
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13157-021-01496-5

Keywords

Alluvial forests; Bioindicators; Dynamic activity; Epigeic invertebrates; Staphylinidae

Funding

  1. project of Cultural and Educational Grant Agency [005PU-4/2019, 1/0658/19, 1/0286/20]
  2. Slovak Grant Agency (VEGA)

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The study compared rove beetle communities in floodplain forests and their ecotones along three rivers, revealing significant correlations between species richness and number of plant species, as well as soil pH values.
Wetlands and especially floodplain forests belong to the most endangered ecosystems in Europe, characterized by complex dynamics of flood and dry periods and providing specific irreplaceable habitats for many organisms, including bioindicators. Many rove beetle species, for instance, are well-known detectors in monitoring ecological change, however, their use in environmental assessment requires to expand the insufficient knowledge on ecological environmental particularities of their assemblages. Therefore, we compared the rove beetle communities in eight habitats of floodplain forests from 2015 to 2016. Staphylinids were sampled by pitfall trapping. We compared the rove beetle taxocoenoses in the floodplain forests and their ecotones alongside three rivers (Danube, Tisa and Begej). We evaluated the impact of plant diversity and cover of vegetation layers, area, circumference and age of forest stands, distance to the forest edge, thickness of the litter layer, physical and chemical properties of soil and leaf litter (conductivity, pH, P, N, H, C) and anthropogenic impact on structure of rove beetle communities. We recorded significant interactions between total dynamic activity of rove beetles and number of plant species in shrub vegetation layer. Species richness was significantly positively correlated with number of plant species in shrub vegetation layer and soil pH, and negatively with relative H content of soil. We did not find any significant correlation between Shannon diversity, but evenness was negatively linked with species richness of plant communities in shrub layer.

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