Habitat Type Affects Elevational Patterns in Ground-dwelling Arthropod Communities

Author:

Uhey Derek A1ORCID,Bowker Matthew A1,Haubensak Karen A2,Auty David1ORCID,Vissa Sneha1,Hofstetter Richard W1

Affiliation:

1. School of Forestry, Northern Arizona University , 200 East Pine Knoll Drive, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 , USA

2. Department of Biological Sciences and Center for Ecosystem Science and Society, Northern Arizona University , 617 North Beaver Road, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Understanding factors that drive biodiversity distributions is central in ecology and critical to conservation. Elevational gradients are useful for studying the effects of climate on biodiversity but it can be difficult to disentangle climate effects from resource differences among habitat types. Here we compare elevational patterns and influences of environmental variables on ground-dwelling arthropods in open- and forested-habitats. We examine these comparisons in three arthropod functional groups (detritivores, predators, and herbivores) and two taxonomic groups (beetles and arachnids). We sampled twelve sites spanning 1,132 m elevation and four life zones, collecting 4,834 individual ground arthropods identified to 123 taxa. Elevation was a strong predicator for arthropod composition, however, patterns differed among functional and taxonomic groups and individual species between open- and forested-habitats. Beetles, arachnids, and predators decreased with elevation in open habitats but increased in forests showing a significant interaction between habitat type and elevation. Detritivores and herbivores showed no elevational patterns. We found 11 arthropod taxa with linear elevational patterns, seven that peaked in abundance at high elevations, and four taxa at low elevations. We also found eight taxa with parabolic elevational patterns that peaked in abundance at mid-elevations. We found that vegetation composition and productivity had stronger explanatory power for arthropod composition in forested habitats, while ground cover was a stronger predictor in open habitats. Temperature and precipitation were important in both habitats. Our findings demonstrate that relationships between animal diversity and elevation can be mediated by habitat type, suggesting that physiological restraints and resource limitations work differently between habitat types.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Field Stations and Marine Labs

McIntire-Stennis appropriations

State of Arizona

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Insect Science,General Medicine

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