4.5 Article

Tree species richness and density affect parasitoid diversity in cacao agroforestry

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BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY
卷 5, 期 3, 页码 241-251

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ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.baae.2004.04.001

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biodiversity hotspot; Brazilian Atlantic; forest; cabruca; canopy; habitat heterogeneity; LME; seasonality; wasps

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In Brazil, cacao is mostly planted beneath shade trees. The diversity of shade trees varies from monospecific to highly diverse canopies, characteristic of pristine Atlantic Forest. This study evaluates the relationships between family richness of Hymenoptera-Parasitica and Chrysidoidea, and tree species richness and density, the species richness of herbaceous understorey, and the area and age of the cacao agroforestry system. We sampled 16 cacao agroforestry systems, with canopy diversity ranging from one to 22 tree species per hectare, in three seasons: summer (March), winter (August) and spring (November). Parasitoids were sampled using eight Malaise-Townes traps per site. Tree species richness and density were enumerated within 1 ha at each site, and herbaceous plant species richness was calculated in eight 1 m 2 plots, within the hectare. The number of parasitoid families increased with tree species richness and density in spring and summer, but decreased in winter. Neither species richness of herbaceous plants nor area and age of the system affected parasitoid family richness. We suggest that the increase of parasitoid diversity with tree species richness and density in warmer seasons reflects increasing heterogeneity and availabitity of resources. The decrease in parasitoid family number with tree density in winter may be due to local impoverishment of resources, leading to parasitoid emigration to neighbouring forest remnants. This result implies that a higher diversity of shade trees will help to maintain high parasitoid levels and, in consequence, higher levels of natural enemies of cacao pests, particularly in the warmer seasons. This prediction is borne out in the experience of cacao producers. The proper management of shade tree diversity will. play a vital role in maintaining the sustainability of cacao agroforestry production systems in the tropics and, concurrently, will. maintain high biodiversity values in these locations. (C) 2004 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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