Effects of habitat and landscape characteristics on the arthropod assemblages (Araneae, Orthoptera, Heteroptera) of sand grassland remnants in Southern Hungary

For adequate conservation planning, ecologists need to understand the driving factors of the species richness and composition patterns of arthropod assemblages. The present study scrutinizes how the vegetation, the surrounding matrix and the process of fragmentation affects the diversity and the com...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Torma Attila
Gallé Róbert
Bozsó Miklós
Format: Article
Published: 2014
Series:AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT 196
doi:10.1016/j.agee.2014.06.021

mtmt:2770254
Online Access:http://publicatio.bibl.u-szeged.hu/16581
Description
Summary:For adequate conservation planning, ecologists need to understand the driving factors of the species richness and composition patterns of arthropod assemblages. The present study scrutinizes how the vegetation, the surrounding matrix and the process of fragmentation affects the diversity and the composition of arthropod assemblages in dune slack meadow remnants of an agricultural landscape in southern Hungary. Spiders, orthopterans and true bugs were sampled with sweep netting in a total of 25 sand steppe, mesotrophic wet meadow and alkaline meadow patches. Our general findings showed that the structure and species composition of arthropod assemblages depended primarily on the vegetation type. From among the size and shape of the patches, their extent of isolation and the types of the surrounding landscapes only the latter one could be shown to have a significant effect, though this was also restricted to the group of spiders. Therefore, the structure and composition of spider assemblages may be used as indicators for the adjacent agricultural activities. Unlike its effect on species composition, the effect of vegetation type was not consistent on the species richness of the arthropod assemblages and functional groups. The influence of vegetation type was greater on the species richness of herbivores (specialist and generalist true bugs and grasshoppers) than on that of the carnivores (spiders, bush crickets and carnivorous true bugs). Based on the fact that neither patch size nor the extent of isolation, i.e. the measures of fragmentation, influenced the species richness of the majority of the arthropod groups significantly, we conclude that fragmentation was not the main threat for the studied arthropod fauna. Furthermore, the present study calls attention to the limited efficiency of Island Biogeography Theory in the case of relatively large, traditionally managed grasslands embedded in extensive agricultural landscapes, like the general landscape pattern of the Great Hungarian Plain. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Physical Description:42-50
ISSN:0167-8809