3.8 Article

Ground beetle assemblages in six different forest ecosystems from Tuscany (Central Italy) (Coleoptera: Carabidae)

Journal

FRAGMENTA ENTOMOLOGICA
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 257-268

Publisher

UNIV DEGLI STUDI DI ROMA LA SAPIENZA
DOI: 10.13133/2284-4880/724

Keywords

biodiversity; carabid beetles; population dynamics; forest ecosystems; species strategies

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Forest ecosystems are an important part of the European territory. In 1994, the Regional Administration of Tuscany initiated the MON.I.TO monitoring program to study the functioning of forest ecosystems and their response to disturbances. This study found that carabid communities in beech woodlands were highly sensitive to environmental changes, while those in other forest types were dominated by generalist species due to anthropic activities.
Forest ecosystems are an important part of the European territory. In 1994 the Regional Administration of Tuscany (Italy) promoted a monitoring program called MON.I.TO (Intensive Monitoring of forest in Toscana) in order to obtain data on the functioning of the forest ecosystem and on its response to possible sources of disturbance in this part of Italy. Although this monitoring program was mostly dedicated to botanical aspects, zoological research has found its proper place within it, and analyzing carabid coenoses provided useful information on the structural and functional characteristics of the forest. This study was performed in six different Tuscan forest ecosystems (Central Italy): 2 beech woodlands, 2 turkey oak woodlands and 2 holm oak woodlands with the aim of broadening the general knowledge of italian carabid communities and understanding the ecological, adaptive and biogeographical factors influencing their composition in different forest ecosystems. The analysis of the species richness and abundance data was carried out using non-parametric tests (Kruskal-Wallis and PERMANOVA tests) and descriptive statistic methods (n-MDS, SIMPER) applied to 22 different collected species (some of them endemic to the Italian territory) revealing that beech woodlands differed significantly from other forest types. Beech woodlands hosted carabid communities that are extremely sensitive to environmental simplification, showing a prevalence of brachypterous and predator species. In the other forest types, instead, carabid communities were composed of generalist species with high dispersal ability that were prevalent due to the effects of anthropic activities that occurred over time in these territories. Our results highlight the importance of considering community-wide functional implications in landscape ecology studies.

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