4.4 Article

What shapes ground beetle assemblages in a tree species-rich subtropical forest?

期刊

ZOOKEYS
卷 -, 期 1044, 页码 907-927

出版社

PENSOFT PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1044.63803

关键词

Abundance; BEF-China; biomass; canopy cover; Carabidae; elevational gradient; herb cover; pH-value; species richness

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资金

  1. German Research Foundation [DFG FOR891/13]

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The study in a subtropical forest ecosystem in southeast China found that ground beetle diversity and community structure were mainly influenced by environmental variables such as canopy cover, herb cover, soil pH, and elevation, rather than woody plant species richness and stand age. The research suggests that ground beetles may respond differently to environmental changes compared to other predatory arthropod groups like ants and spiders. This highlights the importance of studying a wide range of taxa to understand how environmental changes impact species assemblages in forest ecosystems.
As woody plants provide much of the trophic basis for food webs in forests their species richness, but also stand age and numerous further variables such as vegetation structure, soil properties and elevation can shape assemblages of ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae). However, the combined impact of these numerous variables on ground beetle diversity and community structure has rarely been studied simultaneously. Therefore, ground beetles were studied in 27 plots in a highly diverse and structurally heterogeneous subtropical forest ecosystem, the Gutianshan National Park (southeast China) using pitfall traps and flight interception traps. Both trapping methods collected partly overlapping species spectra. The arboreal fauna was dominated by lebiines and to a smaller extent by tiger beetles and platynines; the epigeic fauna comprised mostly representatives of the genus Carabus and numerous tribes, especially anisodactylines, pterostichines, and sphodrines. Ground beetle species richness, abundance, and biomass of the pitfall trap catches were analyzed with generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs), fitted with seven environmental variables. Four of these variables influenced the ground beetle assemblages: Canopy cover, herb cover, pH value of the topsoil and elevation. Contrary to our expectations, woody plant species richness and stand age did not significantly affect ground beetle assemblages. Thus, ground beetles seem to respond differently to environmental variables than ants and spiders, two other predominantly predatory arthropod groups that were studied on the same plots in our study area and which showed distinct relationships with woody plant richness. Our results highlight the need to study a wider range of taxa to achieve a better understanding of how environmental changes affect species assemblages and their functioning in forest ecosystems.

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