1. The interactive effects of livestock exclusion and mammalian pest control on the restoration of invertebrate communities in small forest remnants
- Author
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Raphael K. Didham, Corinne Watts, Gary M. Barker, Jessica A. Costall, Lisa H. Denmead, and Christopher G. Floyd
- Subjects
Habitat fragmentation ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,Ecology ,fungi ,Pest control ,Biodiversity ,Vegetation ,Biology ,Habitat ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Livestock ,business ,Restoration ecology ,Invertebrate - Abstract
In many agricultural landscapes, significant biodiversity gains can be made by improving the ecological condition of degraded remnants of semi‐natural habitat. Recent emphasis has been on the level of management intervention required to initiate vegetation recovery in small forest remnants, but no comparable emphasis has been placed on benefits for invertebrate communities. In the Waikato region, New Zealand, we tested the effects of livestock exclusion, mammalian pest control, and their interaction, on leaf‐litter invertebrate communities in 30 forest remnants, using a space‐for‐time substitution approach. A total of 87 376 invertebrates were extracted from 964 leaf‐litter samples. Invertebrate density was an order of magnitude lower in remnants than in nearby large forest reserves. For key taxa, such as Diplopoda, Isopoda, Coleoptera and Mollusca, 10‐ to 100‐fold lower densities were recorded in remnants with no pest control, particularly where livestock were not excluded. By contrast, other ta...
- Published
- 2009
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