4.5 Article

Cerambyx cerdo and Cerambyx welensii Oak-Living Sympatric Populations Exhibit Species-Specific Responses to Face Ecological Factors in the Wild

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d15040545

Keywords

Cerambyx cerdo; Cerambyx welensii; oak open woodlands; ecological variables; species-specific response; occupancy-abundance; habitat preference; oak decline; longhorn management

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Oak open woodlands have significant socioeconomic and ecological values, providing high-value ecosystem services and supporting traditional agro-silvo-pastoral uses. Two species of longhorn beetles, Cerambyx cerdo and Cerambyx welensii, may become pests in SW Spain, contributing to oak decline. Our four-year study using 1650 feeding traps examined longhorn abundance and habitat suitability, showing that responses were species-specific and that ecological variables played a significant role. This research contributes to the understanding of longhorn occupancy-abundance patterns and can inform management strategies to mitigate their impact.
Oak open woodlands (dehesas) have outstanding socioeconomic and ecological values, sustain traditional agro-silvo-pastoral uses, provide high-value ecosystem services, and constitute key biodiversity hotspots. Cerambyx cerdo and Cerambyx welensii are two large, oak-living, wood-boring, sympatric longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) that may reach pest status in SW Spain, contributing to oak decline. Understanding species-specific habitat requirements determining occupancy-abundance patterns is needed to develop management or control strategies. We conducted a large-scale, four-year study using 1650 feeding traps to ascertain longhorn abundance and species-specific habitat suitability in relation to 18 ecological variables, 9 biotic (oak species, forest mass, trunk diameter, tree density, basal area, forest cover, shrub cover, ground cover, oak renewal), and 9 abiotic (bedrock outcrops, altitude, ground slope, aspect, mean temperature: annual/July/January, annual precipitation, insolation). Results showed that longhorn abundance was sensitive to most ecological variables and to many interactions between them. Interestingly, interactions between ecological variables and longhorn species were widespread, signifying that responses were species-specific and therefore predictive Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMMs) were different between species. Our research contributes to the understanding of the ecological factors that shape longhorn species-specific occupancy-abundance patterns, delves into their sympatric relationship, and contributes toward improving sustainable forest practices that will mitigate longhorn impact in oak open forests.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available