4.2 Article

Effects of pitfall trap spacing on the abundance, richness and composition of invertebrate catches

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 47-53

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/A:1011317423622

Keywords

Coleoptera; efficiency; Formicidae; inventory; invertebrate sampling

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Pitfall trapping is one of the most commonly used methods to survey surface-active invertebrates, but has many potential biases that may affect the catch of invertebrates. The distance between pitfall traps (inter-trap spacing) is one such factor. The abundance, richness and composition of invertebrate orders, and species of ants and beetles was examined for three commonly used inter-trap spacings (1, 5, 10 m) in a grassy-woodland ecosystem in Victoria, Australia. Abundance and composition was not significantly different between treatments for any taxa. A significant difference in richness between treatments was found only for beetles. The 5 and 10m treatments had a significantly higher number of beetle morphospecies than the 1 m treatment. Knowledge of such biases, and how subtle variations in trap design affect efficiency, is important for designing invertebrate surveys.

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