Carabid activity‐density increases with forest vegetation diversity at different spatial scales

Archive ouverte

Jouveau, Séverin | Toigo, Maude | Giffard, Brice | Castagneyrol, Bastien | van Halder, Inge | Vetillard, Fabrice | Jactel, Herve

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley-Blackwell -

International audience. More diverse forests are generally more resistant to insect herbivores. This might be due to positive effects of tree diversity on predation. Although the enemies hypothesis has received conflicting evidence in forest ecosystems. Carabids were sampled by pitfall trapping in a tree diversity experiment, at the centre of plots ranging from one to five tree species mixtures. The composition and vertical structure of the vegetation was assessed at three scales, in the understorey, in the canopy of the experimental plots, and in the surrounding area of each plot. None of the tested vegetation variables had an effect on the species richness of carabids. In contrast, the vegetation compositional diversity at the understorey, canopy and surrounding scales had additive and positive effects on the activity-density of the carabids. Our findings indicate that more diverse forests can host a higher activity-density of predatory carabids, as a result of the combined effect of horizontal and vertical vegetation diversity, which might increase both habitat quality and the amount of feeding resources. This highlights the relevance of manipulative tree diversity experiments to identify the ecological filters shaping local carabid communities.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Biodiversity and biotic risk management in plantation forests. Biodiversité et gestion des risques biotiques en forêt de plantation

Archive ouverte | Jactel, Herve | CCSD

National audience. Plantation forests are increasingly contributing to the world forest economy but these tree monocultures are more prone to pest damage. Recent meta-analyses have shown that tree species grown as p...

Plant neighbour identity and invasive pathogen infection affect associational resistance to an invasive gall wasp

Archive ouverte | Fernandez-Conradi, Pilar | CCSD

International audience. Theory predicts that mixed forests are more resistant to native pests than pure forests (i.e. associational resistance) because of reduced host accessibility and increased top-down control by...

Biodiversité et productivité des forêts : effets des interactions biotiques sous contrainte climatique

Archive ouverte | Castagneyrol, Bastien | CCSD

Chargement des enrichissements...