Determinants of lepidopteran community composition and species diversity in eastern deciduous forests: roles of season, eco-region and patch size

Oikos ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 134-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith S. Summerville ◽  
Thomas O. Crist
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Alice Grace Tipton

In a fragmented landscape, species diversity, richness, and abundance are largely determined by habitat characteristics such as patch size, successional age, isolation, and edge effects. Habitat patch characteristics may indirectly alter the distribution of organisms through impacts on their symbiotic partners, especially when the relationship is obligate. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are obligate symbionts, relying completely on host plants for carbon resources while providing plants with nutrients and water in return. AMF-plant interactions can play a crucial role in plant community restoration success. I examined how AMF-plant interactions were influenced by patch size, isolation, restoration stage, and edge effect in fragmented glade habitat of the Missouri Ozarks. AMF colonization in plant roots of the plant community as a whole increased with the time since restoration began. In these rhizosphere samples and in roots from two plant species (Rudbeckia missouriensis and Schizachyrium scoparium), AMF colonization decreased from core to edge within glades. Soil exhibited substantial shifts in available nutrients across restoration age and from core to edge habitat, but surprisingly these changes were not correlated with AMF root colonization. This finding suggests that in Ozark glades, plant-AMF interactions are influenced by other habitat patch factors such as plant community composition, microbial community composition, and/or canopy cover. I then explored whether addition of R. missouriensis and S. scoparium along with soil inocula collected from well restored sites can catalyze the spread of native microbial communities (including AMF) to surrounding vegetation, thus impacting plant establishment and growth in newly restored glade sites. Results suggest that impact of soil inoculum on nurse effects vary in magnitude and direction among host species. Thus a mosaic of habitat modification regimes could promote plant species diversity in glade restoration. Finally, I examined how AMF community composition in roots of S. scoparium, Ruellia humilis, and the plant community at large change across glades and prairies that vary in restoration history and soil substrate. AMF communities on roots of both plant species and in the plant community at large differed between glades and prairies. Plants collected from glades had distinct AMF communities in calcareous versus acidic sites, which correlated with differences in soil pH. For plants collected in prairies, restoration stage was the biggest predictor of AMF community composition. AMF communities of remnant unplowed prairies differed from those of disturbed prairies regardless of soil substrate. Within disturbed prairies, sites that experienced industrial agriculture contained AMF communities with a greater abundance of Claroideoglomus sp. compared to grazed or remnant prairies. This suggests that human disturbance, such as grazing and plowing, differentially impact soil community composition in these grassland ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 194008292199541
Author(s):  
Xavier Haro-Carrión ◽  
Bette Loiselle ◽  
Francis E. Putz

Tropical dry forests (TDF) are highly threatened ecosystems that are often fragmented due to land-cover change. Using plot inventories, we analyzed tree species diversity, community composition and aboveground biomass patterns across mature (MF) and secondary forests of about 25 years since cattle ranching ceased (SF), 10–20-year-old plantations (PL), and pastures in a TDF landscape in Ecuador. Tree diversity was highest in MF followed by SF, pastures and PL, but many endemic and endangered species occurred in both MF and SF, which demonstrates the importance of SF for species conservation. Stem density was higher in PL, followed by SF, MF and pastures. Community composition differed between MF and SF due to the presence of different specialist species. Some SF specialists also occurred in pastures, and all species found in pastures were also recorded in SF indicating a resemblance between these two land-cover types even after 25 years of succession. Aboveground biomass was highest in MF, but SF and Tectona grandis PL exhibited similar numbers followed by Schizolobium parahyba PL, Ochroma pyramidale PL and pastures. These findings indicate that although species-poor, some PL equal or surpass SF in aboveground biomass, which highlights the critical importance of incorporating biodiversity, among other ecosystem services, to carbon sequestration initiatives. This research contributes to understanding biodiversity conservation across a mosaic of land-cover types in a TDF landscape.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 66-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristine N. Hopfensperger ◽  
Sarah Hamilton

2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 311-334
Author(s):  
Yu. V. Gapon ◽  
S. Y. Kondratyuk ◽  
S. V. Gapon

Results of bryoindication mapping based on calculation of an index of atmospheric purity (IAP) of towns of the Left Bank Ukraine, i.e. the smallest Romny (Sumy oblast) and Myrhorod (Poltava oblast) towns, small Pryluky (Chernihiv oblast) and Lubny (Poltava oblast) towns as well as medium size Poltava town (Poltava oblast), are provided. It is found that isotoxic bryoindication zones of moderately polluted air are predominate and often forming entire areas in the centre / industrial / densely built-up areas of Poltava, Lubny and Pryluky towns while isotoxic zones with slightly polluted or unpolluted air are predominant or more widely distributed in smaller towns Romny and Myrhorod. Correlation of data on species diversity, community composition of bryophytes as well as data of the IAP zoning of the territory of all towns mentioned as well as natural conditions of their territory and anthropogenic pressure is discussed.


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