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Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Spiders contribute greatly to biodiversity and play important roles in terrestrial food webs, yet we know very little about the types of spiders that live in semi-arid grasslands in the Pacific Northwest, USA. As interest in the conservation of biodiversity and restoration of these i...

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Autores principales: Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A., DeBano, Sandra J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809499
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12030249
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author Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A.
DeBano, Sandra J.
author_facet Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A.
DeBano, Sandra J.
author_sort Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Spiders contribute greatly to biodiversity and play important roles in terrestrial food webs, yet we know very little about the types of spiders that live in semi-arid grasslands in the Pacific Northwest, USA. As interest in the conservation of biodiversity and restoration of these imperiled ecosystems grows, it is imperative that we not only describe spider communities (i.e., groups of interacting species) in these areas, but also investigate environmental factors that influence them, and how they respond to restoration. This information can help guide land managers as they design restoration and management plans. Our goals were threefold: (1) describe variability in spider communities in three semi-arid grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, (2) identify environmental variables that may influence spider communities, and (3) determine whether spiders or environmental variables differ between actively vs. passively restored sites. We found that spider communities varied greatly among three superficially similar locations and patterns corresponded to differences in elevation and cover of invasive grass, litter, biological soil crust, and flowering plants. We found no differences between spider communities in active and passive restoration treatments, indicating that if the primary goal of restoration is to increase biodiversity, additional factors must also be manipulated. ABSTRACT: Grassland restoration in North America has intensified but its impact on major invertebrate groups, including spiders, is unclear. We studied three grassland locations in the Pacific Northwest, USA, to (1) describe variability in spider communities, (2) identify environmental variables that may underlie patterns in spider communities, and (3) determine whether spiders and environmental variables differ between actively (removal of disturbances, then plant with natives) vs. passively restored sites (removal of disturbance only). We found spider richness, diversity, and composition differed among the three locations but abundance did not. Sites with more litter and invasive grass cover had more spiders while sites at higher elevation and with more forb and biological soil crust cover had increased spider richness and diversity. Spider community composition was associated with elevation and litter cover. Surprisingly, no spider community or environmental variables differed between actively and passively restored sites, except that litter cover was higher in passively restored sites. This study demonstrates that even in superficially similar locations, invertebrate communities may differ greatly and these differences may prevent consistent responses to active vs. passive restoration. If increasing biodiversity or the abundance of invertebrate prey are goals, then environmental factors influencing spider communities should be taken into account in restoration planning.
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spelling pubmed-79988942021-03-28 Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A. DeBano, Sandra J. Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Spiders contribute greatly to biodiversity and play important roles in terrestrial food webs, yet we know very little about the types of spiders that live in semi-arid grasslands in the Pacific Northwest, USA. As interest in the conservation of biodiversity and restoration of these imperiled ecosystems grows, it is imperative that we not only describe spider communities (i.e., groups of interacting species) in these areas, but also investigate environmental factors that influence them, and how they respond to restoration. This information can help guide land managers as they design restoration and management plans. Our goals were threefold: (1) describe variability in spider communities in three semi-arid grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, (2) identify environmental variables that may influence spider communities, and (3) determine whether spiders or environmental variables differ between actively vs. passively restored sites. We found that spider communities varied greatly among three superficially similar locations and patterns corresponded to differences in elevation and cover of invasive grass, litter, biological soil crust, and flowering plants. We found no differences between spider communities in active and passive restoration treatments, indicating that if the primary goal of restoration is to increase biodiversity, additional factors must also be manipulated. ABSTRACT: Grassland restoration in North America has intensified but its impact on major invertebrate groups, including spiders, is unclear. We studied three grassland locations in the Pacific Northwest, USA, to (1) describe variability in spider communities, (2) identify environmental variables that may underlie patterns in spider communities, and (3) determine whether spiders and environmental variables differ between actively (removal of disturbances, then plant with natives) vs. passively restored sites (removal of disturbance only). We found spider richness, diversity, and composition differed among the three locations but abundance did not. Sites with more litter and invasive grass cover had more spiders while sites at higher elevation and with more forb and biological soil crust cover had increased spider richness and diversity. Spider community composition was associated with elevation and litter cover. Surprisingly, no spider community or environmental variables differed between actively and passively restored sites, except that litter cover was higher in passively restored sites. This study demonstrates that even in superficially similar locations, invertebrate communities may differ greatly and these differences may prevent consistent responses to active vs. passive restoration. If increasing biodiversity or the abundance of invertebrate prey are goals, then environmental factors influencing spider communities should be taken into account in restoration planning. MDPI 2021-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7998894/ /pubmed/33809499 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12030249 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Article
Smith DiCarlo, Lauren A.
DeBano, Sandra J.
Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title_full Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title_fullStr Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title_full_unstemmed Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title_short Spider Community Variability and Response to Restoration in Arid Grasslands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
title_sort spider community variability and response to restoration in arid grasslands of the pacific northwest, usa
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809499
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12030249
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