Soil fauna through the landscape window: Factors shaping surface-and soil-dwelling communities across spatial scales in cork-oak mosaics

  • Pedro Martins da Silva*
  • , Matty P. Berg
  • , Antnio Alves da Silva
  • , Susana Dias
  • , Pedro J. Leito
  • , Dan Chamberlain
  • , Jari Niemela
  • , Artur R. M. Serrano
  • , Jose Paulo Sousa
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The role of ecological processes governing community structure are dependent on the spatial distances among local communities and the degree of habitat heterogeneity at a given spatial scale. Also, they depend on the dispersal ability of the targeted organisms collected throughout a landscape window.

We assessed the relative importance of spatial and environmental factors shaping edaphic (Collembola) and epigeous (Carabidae) communities at different scales.

The sampling sites were four different landscape windows (1 km(2) square each) in a Mediterranean cork-oak landscape in Portugal. Variance partitioning methods were used to disentangle the relative effects of spatial variables and environmental variables (habitat: data on % of vegetation cover types; management: data on forestry and pasture interventions; landscape: data on landscape metrics e.g., patch size, shape and configuration) across different spatial scales.

The relative effects of environmental and spatial factors at different scales varied between Collembola and Carabidae. The pure effect of the environmental component was only significant for carabid beetles and explained a higher percentage of their community variance compared to collembolan communities. The pure effects of the spatial component were generally higher than the environmental component for both groups of soil fauna. Carabid communities responded to landscape features related to the patch connectivity of open areas (grasslands) as well as the shape of cork-oak habitat patches integrating the agro-forest mosaic.

Community patterns of surface-dwelling soil fauna may be partly predicted by some features of the landscape, while soil-dwelling communities require ecological assessments at finer spatial scales.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1511-1526
Number of pages16
JournalLandscape Ecology
Volume30
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct-2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Carabidae
  • Collembola
  • Community structure
  • Dispersal ability
  • Environmental factors
  • Landscape metrics
  • Mediterranean region
  • Multiscale analysis
  • Spatial modelling
  • Variance partitioning
  • GROUND-BEETLES COLEOPTERA
  • CARABID BEETLE
  • DIVERSITY PATTERNS
  • ENVIRONMENTAL HETEROGENEITY
  • AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
  • COLLEMBOLA DIVERSITY
  • SPECIES TRAITS
  • DISPERSAL MODE
  • PATCH SHAPE
  • LAND-USE

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