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New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity

Soil fauna play a key role in nutrient cycling and decomposition, and in recent years, researchers have become more and more interested in this compartment of terrestrial ecosystems. In addition, soil fauna can act as ecosystem engineers by creating, modifying, and maintaining the habitat for other...

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Autores principales: Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores, Pascual, Jordi, Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida, Verdeny-Vilalta, Oriol, Moya-Laraño, Jordi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6571813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31126093
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10050147
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author Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores
Pascual, Jordi
Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida
Verdeny-Vilalta, Oriol
Moya-Laraño, Jordi
author_facet Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores
Pascual, Jordi
Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida
Verdeny-Vilalta, Oriol
Moya-Laraño, Jordi
author_sort Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores
collection PubMed
description Soil fauna play a key role in nutrient cycling and decomposition, and in recent years, researchers have become more and more interested in this compartment of terrestrial ecosystems. In addition, soil fauna can act as ecosystem engineers by creating, modifying, and maintaining the habitat for other organisms. Ecologists usually utilize live catches in pitfalls traps as a standard method to study the activity of epigeic fauna in addition to relative abundance. Counts in pitfall traps can be used as estimates of relative activity to compare among experimental treatments. This requires taking independent estimates of abundance (e.g., by sifting soil litter, mark–recapture), which can then be used as covariates in linear models to compare the levels of fauna activity (trap catches) among treatments. However, many studies show that the use of pitfall traps is not the most adequate method to estimate soil fauna relative abundances, and these concerns may be extensible to estimating activity. Here, we present two new types of traps devised to study activity in litter fauna, and which we call “cul-de-sac” and “basket traps”, respectively. We experimentally show that, at least for litter dwellers, these new traps are more appropriate to estimate fauna activity than pitfall traps because: (1) pitfall traps contain 3.5× more moisture than the surrounding environment, potentially attracting animals towards them when environmental conditions are relatively dry; (2) cul-de-sac and basket traps catch ca. 4× more of both meso- and macrofauna than pitfall traps, suggesting that pitfall traps are underestimating activity; and (3) pitfall traps show a bias towards collecting 1.5× higher amounts of predators, which suggests that predation rates are higher within pitfall traps. We end with a protocol and recommendations for how to use these new traps in ecological experiments and surveys aiming at estimating soil arthropod activity.
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spelling pubmed-65718132019-06-18 New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores Pascual, Jordi Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida Verdeny-Vilalta, Oriol Moya-Laraño, Jordi Insects Article Soil fauna play a key role in nutrient cycling and decomposition, and in recent years, researchers have become more and more interested in this compartment of terrestrial ecosystems. In addition, soil fauna can act as ecosystem engineers by creating, modifying, and maintaining the habitat for other organisms. Ecologists usually utilize live catches in pitfalls traps as a standard method to study the activity of epigeic fauna in addition to relative abundance. Counts in pitfall traps can be used as estimates of relative activity to compare among experimental treatments. This requires taking independent estimates of abundance (e.g., by sifting soil litter, mark–recapture), which can then be used as covariates in linear models to compare the levels of fauna activity (trap catches) among treatments. However, many studies show that the use of pitfall traps is not the most adequate method to estimate soil fauna relative abundances, and these concerns may be extensible to estimating activity. Here, we present two new types of traps devised to study activity in litter fauna, and which we call “cul-de-sac” and “basket traps”, respectively. We experimentally show that, at least for litter dwellers, these new traps are more appropriate to estimate fauna activity than pitfall traps because: (1) pitfall traps contain 3.5× more moisture than the surrounding environment, potentially attracting animals towards them when environmental conditions are relatively dry; (2) cul-de-sac and basket traps catch ca. 4× more of both meso- and macrofauna than pitfall traps, suggesting that pitfall traps are underestimating activity; and (3) pitfall traps show a bias towards collecting 1.5× higher amounts of predators, which suggests that predation rates are higher within pitfall traps. We end with a protocol and recommendations for how to use these new traps in ecological experiments and surveys aiming at estimating soil arthropod activity. MDPI 2019-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6571813/ /pubmed/31126093 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10050147 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ruiz-Lupión, Dolores
Pascual, Jordi
Melguizo-Ruiz, Nereida
Verdeny-Vilalta, Oriol
Moya-Laraño, Jordi
New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title_full New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title_fullStr New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title_full_unstemmed New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title_short New Litter Trap Devices Outperform Pitfall Traps for Studying Arthropod Activity
title_sort new litter trap devices outperform pitfall traps for studying arthropod activity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6571813/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31126093
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects10050147
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