The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores): unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores) : unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles. / Meijer, Seline S.; Whittaker, Robert J.; Borges, P. A. V.

In: Journal of Insect Conservation, Vol. 15, No. 4, 2011, p. 505-522.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Meijer, SS, Whittaker, RJ & Borges, PAV 2011, 'The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores): unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles', Journal of Insect Conservation, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 505-522. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2

APA

Meijer, S. S., Whittaker, R. J., & Borges, P. A. V. (2011). The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores): unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles. Journal of Insect Conservation, 15(4), 505-522. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2

Vancouver

Meijer SS, Whittaker RJ, Borges PAV. The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores): unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles. Journal of Insect Conservation. 2011;15(4):505-522. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2

Author

Meijer, Seline S. ; Whittaker, Robert J. ; Borges, P. A. V. / The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores) : unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles. In: Journal of Insect Conservation. 2011 ; Vol. 15, No. 4. pp. 505-522.

Bibtex

@article{d19a3699412e4608b3f722f7f3f4ce28,
title = "The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores): unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles",
abstract = "We study how endemic, native and introduced arthropod species richness, abundance, diversity and community composition vary between four different habitat types (native forest, exotic forest of Cryptomeria japonica, semi-natural pasture and intensive pasture) and how arthropod richness and abundance change with increasing distance from the native forest in adjacent habitat types in Santa Maria Island, the Azores. Arthropods were sampled in four 150 m long transects in each habitat type. Arthropods were identified to species level and classified as Azorean endemic, single-island endemic (SIE), native, or introduced. The native forest had the highest values for species richness of Azorean endemics, SIEs and natives; and also had highest values of Azorean endemic diversity (Fisher{\textquoteright}s alpha). In contrast, the intensive pasture had the lowest values for endemic and native species richness and diversity, but the highest values of total arthropod abundance and introduced species richness and diversity. Arthropod community composition was significantly different between the four habitat types. In the semi-natural pasture, the number of SIE species decreased with increasing distance from the native forest, and in the exotic forest the abundance of both Azorean endemics and SIEs decreased with increasing distance from the native forest. There is a gradient of decreasing arthropod richness and abundance from the native forest to the intensive pasture. Although this study demonstrates the important role of the native forest in arthropod conservation in the Azores, it also shows that unmanaged exotic forests have provided alternative habitat suitable for some native species of forest specialist arthropods, particularly saproxylic beetles.",
author = "Meijer, {Seline S.} and Whittaker, {Robert J.} and Borges, {P. A. V.}",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "505--522",
journal = "Journal of Insect Conservation",
issn = "1366-638X",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The effects of land-use change on arthropod richness and abundance on Santa Maria Island (Azores)

T2 - unmanaged plantations favour endemic beetles

AU - Meijer, Seline S.

AU - Whittaker, Robert J.

AU - Borges, P. A. V.

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - We study how endemic, native and introduced arthropod species richness, abundance, diversity and community composition vary between four different habitat types (native forest, exotic forest of Cryptomeria japonica, semi-natural pasture and intensive pasture) and how arthropod richness and abundance change with increasing distance from the native forest in adjacent habitat types in Santa Maria Island, the Azores. Arthropods were sampled in four 150 m long transects in each habitat type. Arthropods were identified to species level and classified as Azorean endemic, single-island endemic (SIE), native, or introduced. The native forest had the highest values for species richness of Azorean endemics, SIEs and natives; and also had highest values of Azorean endemic diversity (Fisher’s alpha). In contrast, the intensive pasture had the lowest values for endemic and native species richness and diversity, but the highest values of total arthropod abundance and introduced species richness and diversity. Arthropod community composition was significantly different between the four habitat types. In the semi-natural pasture, the number of SIE species decreased with increasing distance from the native forest, and in the exotic forest the abundance of both Azorean endemics and SIEs decreased with increasing distance from the native forest. There is a gradient of decreasing arthropod richness and abundance from the native forest to the intensive pasture. Although this study demonstrates the important role of the native forest in arthropod conservation in the Azores, it also shows that unmanaged exotic forests have provided alternative habitat suitable for some native species of forest specialist arthropods, particularly saproxylic beetles.

AB - We study how endemic, native and introduced arthropod species richness, abundance, diversity and community composition vary between four different habitat types (native forest, exotic forest of Cryptomeria japonica, semi-natural pasture and intensive pasture) and how arthropod richness and abundance change with increasing distance from the native forest in adjacent habitat types in Santa Maria Island, the Azores. Arthropods were sampled in four 150 m long transects in each habitat type. Arthropods were identified to species level and classified as Azorean endemic, single-island endemic (SIE), native, or introduced. The native forest had the highest values for species richness of Azorean endemics, SIEs and natives; and also had highest values of Azorean endemic diversity (Fisher’s alpha). In contrast, the intensive pasture had the lowest values for endemic and native species richness and diversity, but the highest values of total arthropod abundance and introduced species richness and diversity. Arthropod community composition was significantly different between the four habitat types. In the semi-natural pasture, the number of SIE species decreased with increasing distance from the native forest, and in the exotic forest the abundance of both Azorean endemics and SIEs decreased with increasing distance from the native forest. There is a gradient of decreasing arthropod richness and abundance from the native forest to the intensive pasture. Although this study demonstrates the important role of the native forest in arthropod conservation in the Azores, it also shows that unmanaged exotic forests have provided alternative habitat suitable for some native species of forest specialist arthropods, particularly saproxylic beetles.

U2 - 10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2

DO - 10.1007/s10841-010-9330-2

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 505

EP - 522

JO - Journal of Insect Conservation

JF - Journal of Insect Conservation

SN - 1366-638X

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 40358366